La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959, March 02, 1911, Page PAGE 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE 6
LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER,
THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1911.
ii
I he; Print Slioi
.Villi,-''''''
r
ay
mm
'HEN you want a
first-class job of
Printing, and vant
it without delay; when
you have a design in
printing you would like
to have figured out sat
isf act :riiy; when you
want work at reasonable
prices, bear the EVEN
ING OBSERVER in
mind and call Main 13,
also Independent 1342.
F OIL
p;cted to be one of the most notable
tbat baa taken. place in this section
of Kansas In many yearn.
1
COLD-BLOODED JTUEDER, IX KAN-
SAS REYITED
Jlirch Term to Try Trnnstett, Mar.
derer of Neely, Oil Magnate.
Independence Kansas. March 2
The March term of the circuit coun
about to convene here will be made
notable by the trial of Al. 0. Truskea
for the el!egel murd:r of John D.
Neely in the Palace Hotel In the town
o! Caney, about,25 miles south of here.
on the, morning of January 7 last
The slain man was president of th3
Lima Trust Company, in his home city
and was also the head of serveral large
oil cdmpanies In the Kansas-Oklahoma
field, including the Wichita PlpaLine
Company. The shooting was, the r
nu't of litigation over an oil lease.
On the day before the tragedy
Mr. Neely had arrived in Caney m
his regular monthly inspection of oil
and gas Intersts. The ,. following
morning Mr. Neely was sitting In. the
We Do Anything With Type
EVENING OBSERVER
The Print Shop with a Pay Roll
QllttSlSISISJIIi
Woro to Only Ono
"Bpemo Quinine n
That ia
BLniiQtive Bromo Quinine
usa rm world oyer to cuoe a cold in one oat.
Always remember the full name. Look jC 7 0
this signature oa every box. J5c. ' dtjf
. 1 1 U8-
i kett. sitting opposite, watched nun
! closely) When Neely got up ana
walked toward th.- rear of the hotel
Truskett hurried around to the sam
j ''le room. As Neely passed the door
jof this room Truskett fired at him
I twice. bullet i passed through
Neely 8 h crt, and the other through'
I b!s left arm. When employes or the
hotel reached the prostrate man he
, was dead. - Truskett surrender-d Im
mediately and was hurried in an auto
mobile to the county jail in this city.
The killing Is believed to have, been
hnrely th- result of a lawsuit that
had long been pending between Trus
kett and the Wichita Pipe Line, Com
rany, of which Neely was president.
According to his friends Truskett Was
of the belief that company was try
ing to fob him of his rights. The
litigation was over a lease of, a tract
of oil land a few miles south of Caney.
F"bert F. Goodman, a minor Indian
, who owned the tract, sold hla Interest
several years ago' to Hugh Benson.
an 'oil man. who later dlspos'd of it
to a local oil firm for $400. Truskett
onid this firm $9,000 for the lease.
Shortly afterward the Wichita Pipe
Line Company claimed "the lease of the
I tract, alleging that It had come Into
Possession of It by l ase from nrlvate
turtles said to b interested in the
Wichita company. The-comoanv r.s-
r.erted that the lease to Truskett wna
according to law, as the Indian
boy. Goodman, was not of age when
be signed away his rights to , tne
property. Truskett had kept him
constantly under watch and had rnai
'" b""?t from him the lease on the
dav h became o f aee..
Publ'e symnathv In this loca'tv Is
largely on the side of Truskett. ow
Iner. in a ir-ent measure to the popular
prejudice aeainst the pine line cin
"ppv end ig affllipted corporation,
because of the methods they have nyr--"
d In th ns.t. Relatives and
friends of the accused man have rais
ed a fund of ??0.nnn nd hnv emplnv
"1 em'nent counsel to conduct hi?
dfepe, The romlnjr tr'al Is er
BREAKING A CUSTOM.
How th Salt Shaker Was Introduced
, to the Spaniard.
Until a few years ago no Spaniard
bad, on bis dining table any other re
ceptacle for aalt than the bid style
open cellar. An enterprising Briton
saw this, noted that the salt was al
ways .dirty and gummy and deter
mined to Introduce a certain famous
salt shaker from which clean salt
would run freely In the dampest
weather. Bravely he started to tour
Spain for the company.
"No, senor; no est costumbre usar
mas quo esto" ("No, sir; It's not cus
tomary to use more than that" the
old cellar), was the answer of every
dealer to whom he presented the nov
elty. Again and again he was re
buffed. He began to despair when,
standing one day gazing into a Jew
eler's window, a brilliant Idea struck
him. lie eutered. Itemizing th? child
like curiosity and Impressionable char
acter of his ouarry. he ncrsuaded the
JeWuler to. (lisnlnv n slinl.-of in ia
window and coached him about sell
j ihg it. A Spaniard came along:, look
' ed in the window, saw the curious ob
ject, Investigated. . ' ,
I "It Is very pretty for the toilet ta
ble," he remarked after prolonged
scrutiny, "perhaps useful for the chil
dren. What goes )n it-perfume?"
lSv..u.oioiu jeweier glanced up
from : :ne sri.-jllng. "No, sir; only
salt'! '
I "Man, snltr (
"les. Pocslbly I could cot vou o lit
tlethe klm? that doesn't got sticky
! to try. But I tlon't know." . .
Xho simple srentleman was amazed.
angry, nffrou L'd. by the noveltv. hut
he took it am! 'an ounce or twn nf tim
' special salt ho ne with him. The Jew
eler ordered ar other shaker and more
samples of. sal'. -''By and by the gen
tleman had usei! ay his salt and want
ed more of the :;ame kind. The busi
ness of that co: prny today Is worth
many figures in tjiain every year, and.
more than that, rs it Is "costumbre"
now to use that particular sort of
shaker nnd brand of salt there is vir
tually no competition. Arthur Stanley
UIgg9 In Century.
The Only One of Its Kind
, Satirical
"Dainty
Literary
If You Are a Person
of culture, refinement or intelligence, or all ihree, you cannot
afford not to know LIFE. ,
If you have a sense of humor, you should lee it every week.
Perhaps you bow LIFE slightly. t
Perhaps you don't know LIFE at all.
To get acquainted will cost you Only One Dollar,
Canadian $1.13, Foreign $1.26. Send that amount with
your name and address to Life Publishing Company, 1 7
West 31st Street, New York, and LIFE will cone to you
every wtt for three months.
The conditions of this SPECIAL OFFER are:
hi i open only to new subKribers.
The subicription mut com to ui Jired; not through an gf nt or dealer.
i iiimcnpiioni wu me rtntuea at tnu rale.
Fiva tkllan a Year ! Far Sale Everywhere , Ven Cent o Copy : Vht est jlrtUU I Vh gerf WrttZ
Last cf tha Old Oratora.
The lute Senator John Warwick
Daniel of Virginia ' may be said to
have been the last of the old fash
ioned orators In the house of the con
script fathers. His fame will rest not
on his lawbooks, which were excel
lent; not on bis speeches In house and
senate, which were strong, but on two
masterly orations on Lee and Stone
wall Jackson delivered before bis en
trance Into congress. It may well be
doubted whether anything superior to
tbefu, considered simply as orations,
can be found lu the literature of the
world. They would have delighted
Cicero himself. Champ Clark in Cen
tury, v
Flog gad For Bathing.
Un an Island tn the Cam, at Grant
chester. Is a mill pond known as "By
ron's pool" because it was here that
the poet as au undergraduate enjoyed
his favorite recreation. Even In his
day Edward Conybeare tells us In
'Highways and , Byways In Cam
bridge" bathing wns a practice some
what frowned on by the academic au
thorities. A century or so earlier any
student found guilty of It was publicly
flogged In the hall of his college and
was again flogged on the morrow in
the university schools by the proctors.
A second offense meant expulsion from
the university.
Novelty For Naw Yorkera.
"That sunrise effect Is all wrong!"
said the stage manager of a New York
musical show, ,
"What's the difference?" replied the
scene painter. "Nobody who goes to
a mustcal comedy In New York knows
what a sunrise looks like." Washing
ton F.:tir. '
Holding a Wake Ditto a Girl.
Miss I.ovolelgh The professor was
telling un today about the moon, no
says the moon Is a dond body. Jack
Spooner That so? 1 Then suppose we
sit up awhile with the corpe.--Boston
Transcript
Taath In Their Stomacha.
Whatever It may be that the lobster
aud the crab, rapacious, never dainty,
are eating they always see something
else tbat they want and can't wait un
til they have masticated the first be
fore attacking the second. But they
don't give up the first, not by any
manner of means. Nature, humoring
this rapacious bent, haB fitted the lob
ster and the crab with tcuth in tbeir
stomachs, and they swallow their half
mnstlcnted food and finish the chew
ing rroi-ess with their stomachs while
they seize rtivl chew t!n other thic?
that lms tit t met od them. Lobsters av.d
crab have no teeth In their mouths.
The? chew with their claws what they
V.!tv Ur- t" r.nl lm-l the uniiulshed
Job d'wn to tho'r stomac!: to do th?
rwl vf tin i lii-v. -.u.
Directory of the Fraternal Orders
of La Grande, Oregon
A. F. ft A. iL La, Grande Lodge No.
41, A. F. ft JL M. holds regulai meet
ings first and third Saturdays at
7:30 p. m. Cordial welcome to all
.M asons. L. M. HO YT, W. M.
V C. WILLI A1IS, RecreUr.
3 P. O. E. La Grande Lodge No. 433
meeta each Thursday evening at 8
o'clock In Elk's club, corner of De
pot street and Washington avenue.
Vuitlng brothers are cordially In
vltaa .to attend.
DR. G. L. BIGGERS, Ex Rul.
HITCH McCALL, Rec. 8ec. '
WOODMEN OF THE WORLD La
Grande Lodge No. 169 W. O. . W.
meets every second and fourth Sat
, urdays at K. P. hall. All visiting
mebers welcome. ,
D. FITZGERALD, C. C.
J. H. KEENS Y. Clerk.
1. W. A.--La Grande Camp No. 7703
meets every Monday m the month "ai
the I. O, 0. F. hall. All visiting
neighbors are cordially Invited tc
tttend." ..
I. R. SNOOK, C ,
v it. m. cux. Clerk.
REBEKAHS Crystal Lodif No. M
meets every Tuesday evening in tba
I. 0. O. F. hall. All visiting mem
bers are Invited to attend. .
MRS. KATIE ARBUCKLB, N. 0.
MISS ANNA ALEXANDER, Bsc , ij
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Red Crow
"Lodge No. 27 meets every Monday
t night in Castle hall, (old Elk's ball.,
A Pythian welcome to all vlsitus
; Knights.
JESS PAUL.C. C.
, R. L. LINCOLN. M. of R. k S
P. E. S. Hope Chapter No. 13. 0. E.
C. holds stated communications tba
second and fourth Wednesdays oj,
. each month. Visiting mehiAn Cor
dially invited.
MARY A. WARNICK, Sec.
' ; PAULINE EDERLEB, W. M.
WOMEN OF WOODCItAFT-OraDnV
Ronde Circle No. 47 meet! ev"
first and third Thursday evening
. in the month at the 1. 0. 0. F. bait .
All visltiag members are welcom.
; CHLOE ROBINSON. O M
. UZZIE ELLSWORTH. Clerk
v
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY. $
PniSICIAJfS AND SURGEON 8.
N. MOLITOR. M. D. Physician and
Surgeon. Corner Adams Ave. anJ
Depot street. Office, Main 68; Rcsl
dence 6$. x
r. H. UPTON, PU. G. M D. Physician
r and surgeon. Special attention to
t Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Office
la La Grande National Bank Build
ing. Phones: Office Main 2, Real
dence Main 32.
A. L. RICHARDSON, M. D.
J. W. LOUGHLIN, M. D.
Drs. Richardson & Loughlin,
Physicians and Surgeons,
Office Hours 9 to 11; 2 to 6; 7 to 8,
Phones Office Black 1362; Ind. 353.
Dr. Richardson's Res. Main 65;' Ind.
312. :.)"".';''-
Dr. Loughlin's Res. Main 757; Ind.
1297. ;
Phones Office Main 22; resident,' )'
aiam 728.
J. C. PRICE, D. M. !. Dentist. Room
23. La Grande National Bank Build
Ing. Phone Black 399.
,1
DR. R. L. LINCOLN. DENTIST Firs; :
class services given. Office over Lil- (
ly's Hdw. store. Phone Black-451. ?
DR. P. A. CHAHT.TnM Votor'TiBi-wfi,..
geon. Office at Hill's Drue Stom
La Grande. Residence phone, Re I
701; Office phone. Black 1361; lode f
pendent phone 53; both phones ai
residence. ' . :
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
:'-:0, W. ZIMMERMAN Osteopatt
Physician. Sommer Bldg., Rooms 7
S. 9 and 10. Pboaes1: , Home 1332.
Pacific, Main 63, Residence phone.
Black 951. Successor to Dr. C'B
Moore.
OR. H. L. UNDERWJOD and DR
DORA J. UNDER WOOD Office ov
er Wright Drug store. Special at
tention paid to diseases and surger?
of the eye.
-4-
For all kinds of
MESSENGEB AND DELIVERY
SERYICE
. Call Up The
Central Messenger
and. Delivery Co.
: Oftlce la Fol.y Building
Boom 2
Phones, Main 709 ind.
H. J. EESLER, MANAGLR.
COCHRAN ft COCERAN-Attorneys:
Chas. E. Cochran and Geo. T. Coch
ran.' I Grande National Bank
Bldg., La Grande, Oregon.
T. H. CRAWFORD Attorney at
Practices In al Ithe courts of
state and United 8tates. Offlc
La Grande Natiuuai fiana Bldg
" Grande; Oregon.
O. W. C. NELSON Mining Englrf
Haser City. Oregon.
Backache, Rkenmatlsm-
wean disordered kidneys. Foley Kid
ney Pills have helped your neighbors; ;
iircj wui uiuo neip you. Mrs. B hih. -
Peoria. III., says: "I have suffered N
greatly with my kidneys for years and i -have
suffered also with rhm.M,
Have taken several wel known kidney V
riua. i nese nav don me a greakflfil "
of good, rl'H..t m nr Uise7fi
Savoy Hotel
I EUROPEAN PLAN
The rooms are good and
Steam heated only one
block from depot'
D. C. Brichoux, Prop.
That's mat They All Sav
'."'p;N:.;:vL-:,;(:-
mmmmm mamJmamamm
It?s Good ForWhat Ails You