lix Qpjutvzi Evnm;u oinavii THUEnD'AT, DlCSiron'. S, 1910. THE OBSERVER Bruce Dennis, E '.z r and 0-ern j Catered at Je postoffc at L Onnd j a second-clas matter. I PslIIiLea Except Fstdaj. j KUEsaamcn rates Dally, smgl copy Daily, per wesk.. 15e JiSji per nxrctJ '.Ke Thi papev w!3 nos pntftl'ai aa ar xla appearing over a Boa d p na. ;r'xned artM wCI V revised ea- V A!MwHfln f tt S.a. ; Please !ga font rtlrlet and Mr HawiwmliiMwf.' aiHiuuuvuta THE QTT ELECTIOX. At the coming city election La Grande ha considerable at tale. The mere form of electing officers meant little, but the duties of officers for the next two years Is plainly prescribed, and eTery citizen who Is Interested cannot bat understand that La Grande's growth and prosperity de pends to a great extent on the muni cipal administration. - r ' "We, as a municipality, have enter er upon an era of ImproTement; have pulled op anchor as a village and launched our craft on the higher sea. To make the voyage successful meant work for every citizen, but more es pecially for the men ,who are the And besides the Improvements that are to be continued there is another thing that confronts La Grande. This county has been under local option. Why? Because the people' were dis satisfied with the old -way of hand ling the- liquor question. The local option did uoL prove satisfactory either, and at the last election the people agreed by a large majority to try restricted saloons and stringent regulation. This is an experiment which will come up for trial at once and the Incomine administration will have the regulating power At least the next administration will have sup ervision and be responsible for the results obtained from the ordinances adopted pertaining to the liquor traf fic ... ... , .-. There is no child's play about those matters and It Is no time In La uranues nisiory to practice anyxning but straightforward business sense. This Improvement enoch was ably started by Dr. SL K. Hall when he was w mayor, tie maaa u poss'.Die ior is 1 Grande to loin the procession of pro gression by Installing a water system here at the time when the peace, health and safety of the people de manded It Following his administra tion F. L. Meyers as mayor with the able assistance of a council which was In accord with the advancement Idea, has placed this city in the paved street class;, has started a well de fined system cf seven; las miles of centent. sidewalks and num erous other improvements hare b -teade v . But with all of these things we have barely started. What we need now is a man capable of taking up the load and rendering stM further achieve ment In the way of keeping La Grande to the front FEED AND FUEL GEORGE PAL3TER, TBes. F. J. HOLMES, Tire Pres. TT. L BEE 5 HOLTS, Assn. Cash. EARL 7XXDEL, U Asst Cah. F. L. HETEES ,CashIer. La Gfande National Bank of La. Grande, Oregon United States Depository Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits $2Q0,QC0.Q0 . ' DIRECTORS. GEORGE PALMER, TV. L..BREXI10LTJ9 W. J. CBCRCn F. L. 3IEVEBS F. J. I10LSES If. SI.FIEBCE . With oar ample mcarres and facilities we can renaer yos e3 ctent service and handle your business (9 jour entire sutifsct1on. teloa rttuttty'a circuit court is cow wre&liag lla a muidar trldl. Out of those uatortta.te tragedies i.a grew out of a fiauly quarrel and re salted in the splllLcg of human tljA Soc'.cty Li evidoUy not-reicted a high state of civUitaUoa .whta' auta crimes as this mark the calendar of so apparently a peaceful community as the Grande Ronde valley. . ; Without wi&hing" to even discuss the merit or damerit of the cass be fore the court, we wish to call atten tion cice more' to the danger cf car rying firearm. If Jeas Parker had no gun and could aot hare pro cured one within ten minute ha would not have killed Mr. Porter, bis father-in-law. This la a fact, bo mat ter what disposition Jess Parker may possess. Men only shoot on the spur of the moment If, a the defense may claim, that Porter has a gun and Par ker shot in self-deufense, then had Mr. Porter not been able to have a gun there would have been no killing. We are loaded with laws preventing carrying f weapons, yet they do lit tle good. Why? Because people are not educated from Infancy to. frown upon the man who has a weapon. We need stronger , public , sentiment against the practice A heat of passion, a family difficul ty wherein different ones were Im plicated has caused the death of the father, and a long train of miserable and gruesome circumstances to te threshed out before the public And uu u snail ail have befea finished and Jess Parker Is either , convicted or acquitted a the case may be, who will be the one to suffer? ( The wife and mother for one, but more lasting will be the suffering that the little boy will undergo. His life Is before him,' He will live under the stigma of this family quarrel which has resulted in murder. Try as he may he cannot get away from It. anii he starts In life four-fifths beaten at anything he undertakes because he not only has the ordinary life's strug gle to combat with but he has that terrible odium of a tragedy for which he yas not, to blame also to carry Regardless of the decision of the Jury, regardless of the feeling : of friends or enemies of Parker, keep In mind this the boy is the one to pity most and the boy is the one to lend a helping hand to If the time ever ccroes when it is possible to do so. WIIE5 THE MOTOR SLOWS DOTVS A few days ago the writer met Sen ator W. L. Pierce, who Is probably the best known man in the valley. The senator has a game leg, a flat wheel as it were, and it refuses to heal and become as strong as It once was. After listening to him talk for a while and reviewing his past active life the thought occurred to us what it really means for the motor of the hnman machine to begin slowing down. ; , ;:' '';- -.. ." Here is a man who had never known physical ailment When the cattle needed rounding up In the fall he was the first man In the saddle; when the harvest was in Xull blast he was everywhere lookfng alter the work. No man could ride more miles and do more work! than Senator GrandeRondeXashCo PHONE, MAIN 6 C C rESIXGTOX W. P, CLEATER F. IT. BTRIT n?rce. It 1 different now. IIU phj d'tlan t-I!a hi La to taa the limb dc?s beal and become apparently stront his active days are over and he must let the physical activity be dona by others while he confines himself to V.s office. The punishment is a se vere one for a man who has been tsed to breathing mountain air from the 'honest peak, for one who has been used to saying, "come on, boys, well do this piece "of work today." I TV But it I something that is sure to come to every man. .The physical house in which we live may withstand for years and year,' but like ail ma chinery, some time an eccentric will slip or a babb't bearing will wear out causing a little lost motion which in turn will day by day cause the whole machine to feel the Jar, and we are confronted with old age. This I not Intended for a pessimis tic view of the physical condition of Senator Pierce, but is such a splendid illustration for all who will read that the temptation became too great and we have used hi personality to dem onstrate a (point that is worth remem bering. ' . 1 - - -.- 1 THE WEST AD3USISTRATI0X When Oswild. West takes hi seat as governor we hope he will begin at once and decapitate every republican ofticial that be can. There is posi tively "no reason why, a republican should hold office under Governor West" ' ' -.- . .... ' . Man t; Uro were men who are not asking patronage as a rule. It would be a good lesson to the men who claim strong; party allegiance, yet play the game double to have their heads taken off with one blow of the West ax. : Personality should cut no figure whatever, and ability Is seldom of such quality in state Institutions that It cannot be replaced, so while the orchestra plays let the sheep be led to the blot k and let the ne'wly elected governor act as executioner, v SNAP SHOTS. The Memphis Appeal has made an Instructive verb out of "ballinger" and defines it aa "to stick, to sit tight to be of a holdfast disposition." St Paul Dispatch. . One of the contracts ahead of Pres ident Taft will be to see if there' are enough consular jobs for the politi cal lame ducks Los Angeles Times. Madera sounds more like a cigar than the president of a republic, Atlanta JournaL. Those persons .who are demanding the abolition of football and those who would do away with Santa Clans pro vide equally, brilliant examples of wasted efforts. Pittsburg ' Gazette- Times. - . "V Mr.' Battling Kelson's impersona tion of the Melancholy Pane is said to be most realistic Butte Miner. .'Of course the United tSates will not annex Panama. And we will also see to it that no other power does. Los Angeles Times. ' -. . . 1 We fear that In structing Kermit how to vote the Colonel did not make his Instructions clear St Louis Times. An ortf ration for appendiciUs was performed on an ocean steamship passenger the other day while the vessel was going at full speed. Efen the most expensive luxuries can now be obtained at sea. Pittsburg Gazette- Times. ; . If Jack Johnson keeps on making a nuisance of himself there will be several places where he cant come back. Butte Miner. ' However, we do not understand that T. R. contemplates moving to Tax as. Los Angeles Times. . There Is a movement afooot to have the government buy the Mammoth Cave, Is this a scheme to provide a habitat for Joe Foraker? Detroit News The muck-raking magazines that contributed so much to the Demo cratic success In the East sow have on their hands the job-ef making the Commercial Tribune. . Ton cant play hookey from the school of experience Cincinnati Democratic legislature behave them selves. Los Angeles Times. Many people who think Julia Ward J t i ririi will find it greatly eaity iur 75-4' r. SELECTIONS ARE MORE COMPLETE I ; Much of the joy of giving p ' n wi . 1 ri: nurnecuy iiuea. uy dc ginning 1 jut 1 were is ampie urac ior me consiacrauon ; of each one's individual preference. ' No M WFlfjHt QUALITY SWRE Howe wrote the Battle Hymn of the Republic are mistaken. It was Men delssohn, and they play it at every wedding. Topeka Capital. Senate Adjourns. Washington, Dec. 8 After a brief session the senate adjourned this af ternoon until Monday. WEST POINT UNIFORMS. Cadets Mukt Sacrifice Comfort For the Sako of Looks. "It Is true." said a retired army offi cer In a discussion of West Pointers with the .Washington Herald, "that many West Pointers acquire a figure of perfection of symmetry and a car riage the acme of manly grace, but these are due not to any ingenious ap pliances, . but to the systematic drills and exercises that make the cadet to a certain extent an athlete. At the outset these young fellows are put through what are called the 'setting up' exercises, their , object being to straighten the body and develop the chest One might suppose that it would require a great amount of such exer cise to make any marked showing, but three long hours of such exercise daily will soon produce beneficial results in the most stooped forma - "The cadet uniform is also a great help fa this direction. The dress coat is tight very tight The shoulders are heavily padded in order to give them a square effect The chest is made thick, so that there win be no danger of wrinkling. And In size a new dress coat seems always to be designed for a boy several times smaller than the one who Is to wear it A new dress coat Is fact is always a source of suffering to its owner. When he first puts it on It buttons readily alout the neck, but seems to lack about six Inches at the waist. Toe owner quit squirm and wriggle and atten.pt to re duce his waist to a minimum circum ference, but his maiden efforts are never sufficient to button the new dress coat Experience is a great teacher, though, and the young fellow laugh ingly requests one or two of bisTriends to lend their assistance, and he finally succeeds In buttoning the coat All this for the sake of looks. Comfort has no place In the makeup of a West Pointer; it's discipline and looks." WATCHED OVER BY SATAN. ' s Superstitions That Twin About $ -Mandraks Plant , The little plant the mandrake has wealth of tradition centering round :t such as is seldom found In floral lo - i Quite an insignificant little plant w! j a spindle shaped root often dlvld -I Into two or three forks and rudely r -sembling the human form. It is don1 . less from this latter fact thst It bu , M.k.r mt genjdrnjn 'Cloties ve can wait on you yell, but we can wait on you better todays CHRISTMAS, SHOPPERS to their advantage uieir unnstmas is lost when your GIFT LIST is hastily compiled and wrav.v ?J tJprtred Its nnnu. tjnihorn in th I latter part of the eighteenth century tells us to . v Mark how the rooted mandrake wrara His human feet, his human hands, , . . while it was once believed that a per son pulling up a mandrake would in stantly fall dead. This was said to be because the mandrake had a human heart at Its root and when pulled it would scream in such a. fearsome man ner as to terrify the hearer to death or else Induce : madness. Shukespeare alludes to this where he iys: And shrieks like m an 1 ratten torn out of the earth. That living- mortals, hearing them, run mad. .: , a . ..-.::'...' And again irt "King Henry VII." where Suffolk, asked by Queen Mar garet whether he has not spirit to curse his enemies, replies: - Would curses kill, as doth the mandrake's . groan.. would invent as bitter, searching terms As curst, as harsh, as horrible to hear. From time immemorial the man drake has been associated with en chantments and- has ever been be lieved to be one of the most powerful charms of witches. Mr. Conway, in a paper on "Mystic Trees and Flowers" states that !by popular superstitions in some places It is said to be per petually watched over by Satan, and If it be pulled up at certain holy times and with certain invocations the evil spirit will appear to do the bidding of the practitioner." Westminster Re view. ' ' - '-. The Holland Primrose. ' There is a plant In Holland known as the evening primrose, which grows to a height of five or sit feet and bears a profusion of large yellow flowers so brilliant that they attract immediate attention, even at j a great distance, but the chief peculiarity about the plant is the fact that the' flowers, which open just! before sunset burst into bloom so suddenly that they give one the impression of some magical agency. A man who has seen this sud den blooming say it Is just as if some one had touched the land with a wand and thus covered it all at once with a golden sheet A Reflection en the Horse. "My husband," bragged Mrs. Jones, "was a famous long distance runner In hi day. He once outran a horse In a twenty mile race," "Isn't that funny Y answered Mrs. Smith. "We once had a horse tike that" i Now Jones and Smith wonder why their wives don't speak. Buffalo Ex press. - :'. - - " . . Father Did the Work. bVt- - 1 1 , I. - uj fcuuuiu j im wg; ioa are i young and strong." j "That is rtsbt but my father Is old ; and weak and can no longer support i me." Meggendorfer Blatter. V. x if to visit this store h scs. MILD LIQUID CC11IS ECZE3IA. Skin Sufferers! Drop Greasy Salves v and Jfasty Medicines. That mild, soothing liquid, D. D. D. Prescription Btops the awful Itch with the first drops. .A prescription of ac knowledged value. ' Get a trial bottle at 25c. It will take away the Itch right away and you will sleetf soundly. We assure you per sonally of the merits of this remedy; for we KNOW. The Newlin Drug Co, Dec. 6-8 tClassiHedi I Advertising t A WANTED Position Dy a man as cook and wife as helper. Camp pre ferred. Call at Observer office, tf FOR RENT One front room, on 1911-2nd Btreet Phone Black 1582. t FOR RENT A nicely furnished front room. Inquire 1612 Sixth treet or phone Black-3812. WANTED Girl strippers at King's, Cigar Factory. Must be at least 18 or over. Experience not necessary. Goo wage. -- ' ' mg and Heatilig JohnMelvifle 1423 Adams Art. LA GRANDE, - ORE i iumD aT.'r;a,r,3