LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1911. , PAGE 5 THEATRE TEE THEATRE OF QUALITY. Bert M. Sherwood, Proprietor and Manager... "The Justice of Claudius". ; .- Pathe A magnificently colored Ro .man tragedy, following on the .liriea of last week's glorious picture of "Athalia.'' Special music arranged for tWls beauti .ful production. It is magnificent. "Big Hearied Jim" ... Kalem One ofvKalem's fine western rancher's pictures. Pleasing and beautifully acted. A new .Idea enacted in this picture. "The Leading Lady?".Vitagraph This comedy is great. Our old friend "Bridget" the one of enormous avordupolB, is . the leading lady in a new musical comedy entitled "The- Iriuii Washerwoman." See her at re hearsals. Illustrate song "When tW ffcerp- Ars ia -the Fold." Surg by , : ; ';; - '. Evenings . . . . . . . . . . Mr. Ferrin. f EKSONALS. $ (32E23E ! LOCALS Summer prices for milkiprevail at the Elue Mountain creamery after June 1st.. Five cents a quart. Mrs. Latman, assisted by1 Mrs. J. B. Stoddard will tn'.ertain the ladies of the Presbyterian Aid society at her beautiful home in Frultdale tomorrow afternoon and a most enjoyable time Is anticipated. . The ladies are asked to meet at the home of Mrs. J. T. Rich ardson not later than 2:30 when con veyances will be In waiting. Chang-e fa Clerics Office. Forest Ivanhoe, who had been depu ty county clerk for soma time, has re signed his position and Miss Anna Alexander has been promoted to the office of first assistant to County Clerk Wright. Clare Scrlber has been em ployed as second assistant. j Editor Flaggo! Elgin Is In the city ! today on business. W. J. Isom of Joseph was a gues$ at the Savoy hotel yesterday. y Walter S. Miers of Allcel, is regis tered today at the Savoy hotel. . F. H, Kiddle of Island City wag reg istered at the Sommer bouse today. ; J. N. Chandler of Elgin Is a business visitor here. 1 .. D.'E. Myere was a visitor from Is land City yesterday.' ",' F.'ay Harvey returned today from a visit In Portland. Mrs. F. C. Dittebraiidt left . this morning for Portland where she will attend the Rose Festival. J. K. Wiilght joined the excursion ists and went to the Farmers" union picnic at Joseph this morning. Don MacLachlen returned this morning from Portland where he had spent several days. .' - James Higgins, of Hepner, filed a homestead application! in the local United States land office today. ' Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Wills, of Salt Lake City, are visitors' here. They I are stopping at the Foley house , Arrhiq ' Rtrmp' end A. A. Mclntvre were among the visitors from Baker yesterday.- 1 , ..; ' J. F. Elliott and Guy I. Patten were here yeBttrday from their homes in Elgin. . . ,; ( ': ; v W. A. Terral, the attorney, is here I from his home in Union. He is regis tered at the Savoy. Lynne Wright, son of J. K. Wright, left this morning for the Allcel or chard tracks where he will stay we::k or so visiting. Myrtle and Mlldren Hoyt, daughters, of L. 1. Hoyt, water superintendent, loft this morning for Haines where they will visit with their grandmother, Mrs. Gilbert. Mrs. R. J. Cotner and children left last evening for SHverton where .she will join her parents when the party will go to Portland for the Rose" Fes tival. After visiting Portland Mrs. Cotner will return with her parents to Silverton where she will make an extended visit. . C. C. Williams, brother-in-law to S. M. Slough, publicity manager of the Commercial club, left this morning for Portland where he will attend the an nual four day banquet and celebration of the Oregon Life Insurance com pany's men. Prom Portland Mr. Wil liams will go to Prineville where he will establish his headquarters. ' BUSINESS PR0SPECT8. - : Wall street may be blue, but fundamental conditions are very sound every where. The banks are all strong in cash. In fact, the majority of them have too much money. For the past four years the policy has been to cur tail, retrench, weed out the bad from the good and economize In general. The result bas been the placing of the finances of the -country on a sounder basis and . the strengthening of th& general business situation. Business U ' ready to go ahead as soon as the country is releas&i from its bondage of political agitation. One of the great troubles is that , we have too : many politicians who lack the business training necessary to safe and sound leg- J isintion. John W. Gates. PoiSTO'IaK never nrurnv 30 years TAILING ntrlLUI THE STANDARD! PILES, CHILBLAINS. r&LONS, BURNS, ETC. VALUABLE HOUSEHOLD 3LVC. AU 0HUB0ISTS HAVE IT OR WILL OBTAIN ON RtftUtST ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES. friceSSCenfs. UNGLEV CO, SftN FRANC'SCO. Your Interests are Ours . The retailer In anyllne of bos. Inesi should stanf for the In terests ef Ms customers. In the long ran, ft Ison them be must depend. It Is because we know that wo must satisfy you that the Earrnian Line Is the one sold exclusively In our photographic' department. No. 8 A.. Folding rocket Kodak Post Card slie, $20.00. Wright Drug Co. PURE DRUG DRUGGISTS. NOT A TYRANT. Side by side with our helpless officialdom - has grown up the tremendous structure of modern Incorporated business. There Is nothing Inefficient In that devel opment Its wealth Is limitless and Increasing; Its organisation has the perfection of the ma chine; Its ministers spring to their tnsks endowed with the best specialized training that sci ence can give them. The result of contact between the two can have but one Issue, and the peo ple. Instead of looking at the ex ecutive as a possible tyrant, as Jefferson did, look npon him to protect the individual citizen, against the oppression of this on official power of business. It la sot the people who are in danger . from a strong atate government It Is the government Itself that Is in danger from private inter ests. Henry L. Stlmson. ... ' 8ENTENCE SERMONS. A man most stand erect., not be kept erect by others. Marcus Anrellua. : I God writes "opportunity" on one aide of the open doors he writes "responsibility'' on the other aide. Dr. Uracey. And be who waits to have hla task marked oat Shall die and leave his errand unfulfilled, Lowell Perfection of character can be achieved only .through struggle, through discipline. It Is for ulin that overcoDjetb that the crown of life Is reserved-John Fluke Though we travel the world over to And the beautiful, we must carry It with us or Bud it sot- -Emerson. ' . DICKENS' EPIGRAMS. ly It Is a dangerous thing for himself, but when he laughs in wardly It bodes uo good to other people. Pickwick. There are quiet victories, great sacrifices of self and noble acts of heroism done every ( day in nooks andcorners and in little households and in men's and" women's hearts. "Bottle df Life." Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen nineteen six, result happiness; annua) income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty . pounds naught -and six, result misery., , The blossom is blight ed; the leaf 1 withered; the god of day "goes, down upon the dreary scene. Mlcawber. ; DIVORCE EVIL8. There is a aoclal scourge more blighting and more destructive of family life Uiuo Mormonlsm. It ia the fearfully increasing number of divorce mills through- : i out the United States. These mills, like the mills of the gods, are slowly but surely grinding to powder the domestic altars of the nation. I tan conceive no scene more pathetic or one that appeals more touchlngly to our sympathies than the contempla- Uon of a child emerging Into the years of . discretion seeing her father and mother estranged from each other. Her little heart Is yearning to love. She longs to embrace both parents, but she finds that she cannot give her affection to the one without ex citing the resentment or displeas ure of the other.-Cardinal Glb- ; bona. JAPAN IS FRIENDLY. Nothing astounds me more than the feelings that prevail in regard to Japan and our repub lic. If ever there were two na tions that not only should live at pence with each other, but r which should, be sincerely at tached to each other, it is Japan and the republic, and I can tes tify from my visit to Japan that the feeling there ' Is what it should be. strong and vtara- ,' thetic Andrew CarnoRi KEEP YOUR TEMPER. Happy those who have a lyre In their heart and music In their minds which their actions per form. Joseph Joubert , Anger Is as a stone cast into a , wasps' nest Malabar Proverb. 1 think the first virtue Is to re strain the tongue. He approaches nearest to the gods who knows how to be silent even when he is in the right-Cato. V Most of the shades of life are produced by standing In our own sunshine. Emerson. " Grand Forks to Havs Water Filtered. ' The new rapid snnd filter which has been in the course of construction since early last fall for the cltv of Grand Forks. X. p., has been com pleted, and official tests are now In op eration. It is expected that the city will accept the plant and the citizens will again have pure drinking water ifter being without it for more than four months. value'of publicity. It is an encouraging sign that so much Is being spoken, writ ten and thought about bribery, which Is the curse of a country. . Progress has begun whenever a . community has become con scious of an evil and is sensitive about It. Those are not the best times when the least .Is said about h crime. Silence . may mean a blunted oonscleme, a low standurd of judgment or It mn Indicate despair Let the i agitation go on Let the pulpit . and platform "resound with strong Invectives aud powerful appeals. 'Let the press In heavy headlines arouse public indlgnn i tlon. and let the children speak of If ut school l,et tln flutters discuss It at the family table, snd let the mothers voice their righteous wrath i It brlliery be painted In Its blnrkest colors, aud let the denunciation be di rected against him that gives as well as blm that takes the bribe. -Rev. Joseph Stole WISDOM OF TEMPERANCE. . The excessive use of Intoxicat log liquor Is the cause of a great deal of the poverty, degradation . and crime; of the world, and one t who abstains from the use of such liquor avoids a dnngerous temptation. Abraham Lincoln showed that be believed this In writing out for his boy friends the pledge of total abstinence so often quoted. Each person roust determine for himself the course be will take In reference to his tastes and appetites, but those who exercise the self restraint to avoid altogether the temptation of alcoholic liquor are on the -safe and wiser side. President Taft IMAGINATION. And as Imagination bodies forth Theforrus of things unknown the poet's pen , ' Turns them to shapes and gives to airy nothing A local habitation and a nam. Such tricks haa strong lmagtna- 'ttoft'V ; That if be would but apprehend v some Joy It comprehends some bringer of that Joy. Shakespeare. Directory of the Fraternal Orders of La Crande, Oregon Siam's New King Will Establish Schools Like Those In America i : I X i . i , - - ' ' 1 . ' 1 ' ff lllilSliiil ,; ; I'-ii I 1S:I!S 1 : fc. v .a. wsfc.aewa.iiasat., . .:s-.:!t)-vv:AlL.a. m Jama m.v.iv4v,wim - ' ' V.J kUV - i s y V '' . I . w'" 1,,, .k--."' Jf 1 -v 1 VV'- team, King Chowfa of Slam, who has been on the throne only a few weeks, is reported to have taken steps to establish schools lu his country that will offer to all his young subjects a chance to get an education. Jle intends to develop a system of schools modeled on that of the lilted States, which he stadled closely when he visited this country a few years 'ago, -when he '"was the crown prince. The king himself is a graduate of England's famous Oxford university. He speaks several languages fluently, has written boo';s and plays and Is alto gether progressive When he was but a boy be saw a typewriter for the first time, and he immediately ordered one. lie became an expert operator and. If necessary, could earn his living running the machine. At bis suggestion the manufacturers made typewriters with Siamese characters, and they were soon In general use in Bangkok and other Slameso cities.' King Chowfa Is twenty nine years old. He Is a close student of military nffairs and is familiar with the tactics and systems lu vogue In England anil Germany. His father, (he late King Chulalongkorn, was more progressive than his predecessors And oaved the way for the reforms that his son is expected to introduce. second and fourth Wednesdays of each month. Visiting members cor dlally Invited. CARRIE B HUNTER, W. M. MARY A. WARWICK, Sec. . WOMEN OP WOODCRAFT ft rs.1' I Ronde Circle No. 47 meet Erst an rblrd Thursday evf '- Vv In the mo. . vt the I. O. O u All visiting ;. uihers are ..';... , CARRIE ItOBBS, O. M.,' , LIZZIES ELLSWORTH. .Ji.. - F. &.A. M. La Oranae Lodge No. 41, i F. ft A. M. holds regula. meet ings first and third Saturdays at 7:30 p. m. Cordial welcome to all Masons. L. M. HOYT, W. M. J C WILLIAMS, Secretary S. P. O. E. La Grande Lodge No. 433 meets each Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in Elk's rlub, corner of De pot street and Washington arenne. Visiting brothers are cordially tn- vlted to attend. , . II. J. RITTER, Ex. Rai. H. E. COOLIDOE. Rec. Sec. 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 tnebers welcome. D. FITZGERALD, C. C. J. H. KEENEY. Clerk. ' meets every Monday In the month at the li 0. O. F. ban. .'All visiting neighbors are cordially invited to attend. ; ; , ; .... E. B. DANIELS, ED. 'HEATH. Clerk. I. EDEK AH S Crystal Lodge No. f meets every Tuesday evening In th I. O. 0. F. hall. All visiting mem bers are Invited to attend. MRS. KATIE ARBUCKLE, N. 0. MISS ANNA ALEXANDER. See. INIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Red Cro Lodge No. 27 meets every Monriaj night In Castle hall, (old Elk's hall.) A Pythian welcome to all vlsltlni Knights. . ' JESS PAUL. C. C. , R. L. LINCOLN, M. of R. 8. M. W. A La Grande Camp No, 7703 0. E. S. Hope Chapter No. 13, 0. B C. hoWp stated communications the Underwood Standard Typewriter IIUCORTOIUTE ETERY DESIRED FEATURE OF ALL OTHER HA C1I1KES IJiTO OK E AND COMPARE IT FEATURE WITH FEATURE, WORKING PART WITH WORKING PART, AND THE UNDERWOOD WILL STAND OUT SUPERIOR. ' - IT PERKITS OF THE GREATEST LATITUDE OF WORK-DOES MORE AND BETTER WORK PER GIVEN EFFORT AND ADMITS OF THE GREATEST SPEED. ,h if t. ", The Machine You Will Eventually Buy Is Underwood Typewriter Company " (Incorporated) :.:'y- . Portland, Ore., Branch. 68 Sixth Street