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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1911)
-jMog so; i9ii.: PACK Til T7f1 f! company's.: . II' THEATRE '". PROGRA 31 March 28, 29, 30. . The Open Road......... Kalem The' tale of a gipsy camp. Fentare F!lm. " Legally Dead .....Pathe Freres A drama oMabsorblng intT " est Magnlflceil scene of a pre mature blast inla stone quarry. One of the greatest prodqctiojre of this great coppany.. yv A Queen for bayyyitagraph ( . She Is a laftghjff25p lbs, full weight" TwUfiTbe a, 8hamei to 1.11 .1 A. 1 i ' Tl icu vjuai uuppeus. j . ..-. . .1,1.1 .' ? j K Tbat new Stork nf W8llnir Vina arrived at ;W. H., BohnenkVmp 'and li mem ; rktw you tne ..-i - 3-27-tt ' y L.yie Tuesday Musical prograjo next t riday night. Hill orchestraIn addi range to be present ' A lare stock of wall pap rived at W. H. Bohnenka pany, which contains the designs. Call and see us ing. 1 Mch 27-tf p Ladies of the M. E. churc a cooked food sale in Bus market, Saturday, April 1 r Illustrated .sou? :( "Call me up Some Rainy Afternoon' ' , " Miss Nellie Garrlck. ...Matinees Mr. George Birnie.., '.Evenings 10 CA LS J Boys and girls seln twelve boxes ot "Toke One" Shoe Pblish 10c each. Make forty cens andjgeya nice foun tain pen free. . A. w Westby 129 Grand Ave. PortlandOreg The Oregon will furiyBh first class rooms and board at $30 and $3 per month. No. 10 ticcv.; ..ti " For sewer pipe call Fqler's Trans fer office. The Unique Cleaning company has the only contract, system m the city. Four suit per month per contract $1.50 Work called for and returned free. Phone main 70. "Read in Sunset Magailnef Motoring Through California by Llfcyd Osborne, beautifully, Illustrated lnj tour colors. The Spell, a romantic Bajal by C. N. A. M. Williamson. In thV Shadow of the Dragon by Grant Carpenter. De scriptive story of San Francisco's Chi nese quarters. April issue now on Bale 15 cents." '' eod Cement walks at lowest price, work guaranteed, gon. John Oberg, I No more, mistakes about walks." Oberg will call on you EXPERIENCED GARDENER Iwrfnts work at pruning, spading ana seed ing gardens. ..Inquire at Observe' office! " W 3-29-2tpd Ibtel Ore- 3-29it . Wment B-29,3t 0 I mill iff f if 1 1 1 m 1 1 tit Y 1 just inimcj 0 What a com ;ort it is and howXindep sndent you are wn,en p ovided with a can ot tw of HEINZ COMATO BOOT. Wash-day M or House cleaning .day. Almost a meal of itself in a few minutes. " v '. i 15c a can; 2 for 25c. i IPatdson Bros.! Both Phones IIHiii6HUIMHUMll Harry Walburn of Bois; barber shop next door to cafe on Fir street Anyone wishing come to Kertly bari) ts. Ar- fr irftar- iu& corn Very lattsi before buy- A hold soft's meat has opraed iODes llpp:d v:..;.VfEliS0SlLS."5:; I"- - XTptofl H. Glbbs 'is spending the day in Union and Cove." 4 ' ' : ; H. ; L,f Halv:rson of Chicago Is a gu'est'Of the Foley. ' " ; j. Louts Randall and,. K Dohcr.ty 'pf Medford, are at the Blue Mountain hotel. . ; , Miss Alvetta' pates l:t yesterday for Drain to visit with her brother, W. E. Gates, who- is a large stockman. H. W. Loveland, representing J. R. Smith Cigar company Is registered Rt the Foley. ' " ; Dave Edwards, Pdcatello, Idaho, ii registered at the Grande Ronde Valley hous:. ; ' - ' ' Mrs. Ivanhoe returned to Enterprise this morning after being a guest of friends hers, for a few days. Geo. H. Recht of Portland is at the Sommer. Mr. Pecht. represents, the Pacific Hardware and Steel company, Portland. E. S. Forstrom of Colfax registered yesterday at the Sommer. Mr. For strom is a commercial man represent ing several standard lines. Passenger Brakeman Ralph Fowler arrived this morning from Pendleton called here by the illness of ex-Councilman Ed Fowler. J. Frank Evans arrived this morn ing from w stern Oregon where he has been ill for some time. He is a guest of his mother in South La Grande. J. G. Brown, with Slmonds Manu facturlng company, Portland, spent several days in the city calling on the hardware trade, and carpenters, talk ing Slmonds saws. '. Ed Mooris la in the city and is stop ping at the Foley. Mr. Morris repre sents Winchester , Repeating ' Arms company, New Haven, Conn., and will call on the local gun trade in Union and Wallowa counties and visit the trap shooters of the two-county asso ciation, x : ' ., : -. ,:v X DRUGS OFANTIQUiTY. Th ' Doms That Mankind 8wailow4 Thousands of Years Ago. . , It Is admitted that the oldest medical work known Is tb Ebtyn papyrus, discovered by Georg Ebera In bis journey to Egypt in 1872-8. U is i scroll twenty , yards long and a foot wide and has been studied and trans lated by Voo0fele and reviewed by Von Llppmann. It wum written about 1550 B. though some of the mate rial of which it is a compilation dates back to about 8700 B. C. , The medical substances mentioned include copper oDce more costly than fold and silver lesd, iron, antimony, carbon, snlphur, salt soda, gypsum and other minerals; milk, fata from many animal, wax. and the horn, blood and other portions of domestic and wild animals; castor and other oils, honey, raisins, grappa, figs, dates, wine, beer, linen, flax, lanolin, papyrus, numerous resins, caraway, fennel, dill, mellot, watercress, peppermint, cori ander, lettuce, endive, absinth, pome granate, calamus, aloes, safflower, crocus, inAlgOv' henbane, mandrake, opium and other plants and vegetable products. In preparing drags solids were grat ed or powdered In a stone mortar. There were many processes of treating them, such as roasting, baking, press ing, steeping, warming, boiling in vari ous substances, macerating with lye. evaporating and fermenting with yeast Liquids were altered and clarified. Some recipes contain two or three in gredients, but others oav as many as thirty-seven materials. if; I Perfect in Style, , Fit, Fabric and Workman ship 1 t La Vogue Garments WSBJBBBJJSSBBBBJSSJ1BBBBS BSSBSSSBBBJBHHBBMSSBMSSSSBBSSHMBMB Never Disappoint 1 1 THEIR CBVCEft, LIES AXD DISTINCTIVE STYLE BECOME A FABT OF THE FABRIC THROUGH THE TAILOISS SKILL IN CUTTING, AJiD LA VOGrE COATS AND SUITS HOLD THEIR ORIGINAL SHAPE AND STYLE UNTIL?; THE FABRIC IS" '.5 .THROUGH..;.:.,, h ,.. -r,k :m ,: l L V';,:' -; : v-;-,--. , jv. r';4 V THE LINING AND, MATERIALS THAT GO INTO THE MAKEUP OF THESE GARMENTS ARE STRICTLY HIGH GRADE1' THE" LITTLE DETAILS OF FINISH ARE THOROUGHLY TAKEN CARE OF. (H)LLARS ARE REINFORCED AND, SHIELDS FURNISHED" , IN ALL COATS. . THESE LITTLE POINTS ALL HELP TO MAKE PERFECT GARMENTS. v ; . LA VOGUE COATS AND SOTS ARE MADE IN A RANGE OF DESIGNS FOR WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. PARTICULAR AT TENTION HAS BEEN PAID TO THE CREATION OF GARMENTS SUITED TO ODD SIZED FIGURES. V a FOR THOROUGHLY HIGH GRADE AND FAVORABLY PRICED' COAT . AND SUITS WE CANNOT RECOMMEND THE LA VOGUE STYLES TOO HIGHLY AND THE MAKERS ALSO GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. OUR PRICES RANGE FROM $18.00 TO I32J10. QUALITY THE SAME Pri ices Le s 5 .5 1 : 35 . NOTES FROM THE LABOR WORLD Conductors. Industrial training forms an import- Cleveland's one thousand shirtwaist makers will organize. A union of women teacher has been formed recently at Glasgow, Scotland. The Duluth Typographical union will celebrate its' 25th anniversary on April 30. One .hundred and eighty-four Amer ican factories have started branches In Canada. The Colorado house pf representa tives passed a bill for an eight-hour day for working .women. , ., The United Hatter's of North Amer ica will hold their next annual con vention at New York on May 8. Masons' helpers, carpenters and painters may strike at Kingston, Can ada, May 1, for increased wages. Common laborers in the employ of the city of Portland! Ore., will here after be paid 12.75 a day instead of 12.50. ''The Minneapolis, Minn.', bartenders' local is now at its highest, lripoint of membership, there being ;56l on the rolls. '. ' ' ": ' The- San Francisco Labor , council has decided to demand representation of labor, on the board of directors of the Panama-Pacific expositions com mittee. : Two girls have been licensed to op erate elevators in Milwaukee., They are employed at the Y. W. C. A., and are pronounced among the best in the city.''"' ' V- . v, The Texas state conference of brick layers is now composed of 33 unions with a total membership of 2,500. The wage scale, for the entire state Is $6 a day. .' . -.' ... . At a cost to the city of 10 cents each, 27,693 men , and women have been famished employment during the year 1910 by the municipal free em ployment bureau of Portland. , California's assembly, by 4 vote of 71 to 0, passed the Griffin anti-blacklisting bill, which makes it a misde meanor for any employer to prevent a former employe from obtaining new employment In the last four years 20,000 mem bers have been added to the machln- ant part of the work of the public schools of Hawaii. Twenty schools, for example, are equipped for carpen try work, and 7,575 pupils engaged In that work during the last year. In January, 1911, 2,078 positions were secured for men and women ap plicants by the Minnesota free em ployment agencies. ' Lyle Tuesday Musical program next Friday night. Hill orchestra In addi tion. Many excellent numbers. Ar range to be present. Classified ndvertisina G Q 3 q, $ Does 'Em All Good. . t 1 The advantages to be derived $ from ' the classified columns of the Evening Observer are becm- Ing well known. f A. L. Rice or ?' Imbler recently spent $1.75 in this column and closed a' deal 3 representing more than a thou- sand dollars. Some La Grande business men were offered $1,000 $ for a piece of property and they $ decided to advertise It first. They spent $2.50 In the classified col- $ umn and sold the property for f $200 more than they were first $ offered. One lady phoned In re- cently saying, "Take out my rooms for rent ad. People are driving me crasy making inquir- lea and my house has been full i since the second day I ran the ad.' ' ' Haven't you got something you 4 would like to trade; soma prop- erty you want to sell!, Remem- ber there Is nothing too small to 3 advertise In this column and nothing too large. The price is a cent a word each dav. Trv it. t Ists' unions in New England and forty 4 thousand ' members have benefited by Increased wages and better conditions. The conductors of Sacramento. Cal. are to make a hard fight to secure for Sacramento the home for the agedand disabled, for which funds have been provided by the Order oRallroad rl for gener- WANTED Competent al housework. Good Mrs. James Itusse! Main arid Third streot 4 ages. . Apply 1802 corner FOR SALE OR RENT 400 ac '."""' ' mountain pasture. water. Call or pho Farm 174. 3-28-4-1 1 P oortence, good E. H. De Long, LOST Find flee. -1 Ep worth league button. leave at Western Union of- 3-30-tf FOR SALE 160 acres of land, si? miles north of Summervllle, Oregon (Union county).; Sevenl acnes und,er fence and In cultivation. Aood well of water, and some bul Idfng, 300,000 feet of aaw timber. Win take $14.00 per acre, or trade for a little home near town. A snap. Call or write to R. M. Needham, Summervllle, Oregon. Mch27 3 t " . FOR SALB Several good sjppcmd hand ' buggies. Inquire Jas. Oftrrity, Is land City. FOR RENT Light ..1 housekeeping. partly furnished. 9C8, Cipher Third and J. . FOR SALK-SIngle-oomb White- Lea horn eggs bred, to wlntirlaylng; setting $10; . 100 eggs, $6.0p.Mrs. J. W. Egan Island Cltv. IFniitdale). FOR SALE 30 quarts or Muit. Oak street. Phone 3752 Black. 1902 FOR RENT Furnish room. JBlock ost office. Inquire Mrs. LcTqul ling. - : )Mch22tf r FOR SALE Sixteen lots, four blocks from round house. A. M. Hadricks. FOR RENT Furnished .roo1 rr iins. , Roy Rynarson. Sixth street. ClOBat' in- lO- WANTED A man with ay, f e.w teams to take contract for h.ytS& 1 1-2 or , 2 million feet of liMbgv . hour trip. ' Apply at once to OwbtSbl Lumber Co., Union, Oregosv s& FOR SALE Two good homestead r linqulshmehu in Wallowa. tjutsitdl. Inquire of D. Birchoux. . ' EMPLOYMENT OFFICE W fumasts . all kinds of reliable help on sTwt notice. We have them listed tofvtaiti office. -If you are reliable lraaii aa your wants. Wilson & Reed, pmj. ment office In postoff Ice blosfc. . r CITY ': 8CAV ANGER Josepfij :Tmv bull, city scavenger. AnyorfwKw , Ing my sej-vlces call; up Cify tov der's office. ' FOR RENT Furnished and? Egaa, housekeeping rooms. Mrs. E. C,:UCcsam .1417 Fourth street. WANTEDr-A girl for general' bmtsr Apply 1602 Sixth street.' LOST Gold , watch; initial "G W , side case;' gentleman's photo fasd Reward; leave at Observer office. 3-29-tr i BOARD "AND ROOM $25 per mooUb. Mrs. K. J Jones, 2003 N. FU- sii ' 3-29-tf " . SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN, WITH feTlixK f AND SNAP, THAT FIT AND WEAR. ' VY )t . .s v Pumps are the thing for Spring and Sterna i trier. Wa hnva ' tVi straps, in Velvets, Buedes. Satin Patents Ir and Gun Metal, fromV $2.50 to $1C3 1 Many New Styles in Men's Oortis, in Tina i z and Blacks, from.. l$350'to $&M it . (Successor to Smith & Greene.) jj EXCLUSIVE AGENT FOR 'ONXY' H03IERZ j .1 T''T hi i L.r4l.4h4A Mim