LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, WEDNESDAY, -'JUNE U, 1911. PAGE 3 lhds5s THEATRE "The Spirit of the Light".... , Vltagrapu A love story of an artist and .the daughter of a l!ghtl use keper. 'It is beautifully por trayed and the photography ts Just magnificent. ; ; .. "Harnessing the Ocean'. A com prehensive series of' moving photos showing the complete .workings "of the Atlantic City .ocean wave motor generating 7,500 horse power. The only .one of its kind in the world, "The Two Heroes" . .. . . Edison .Friend JBumptious . Is an old civil war hero, claiming great ; heroic deeds to himself. The .climax Is great It will please everybody. ..' - "The Rescue of the Abernathy; ' V Kids'; .. . J . i . . . . . Pathe - - Tiiia ia a wouuciiui iictui e. ; The kids are actually rescued by real bloodhounds from real businesslike wolves. There Is no "fake" about, this. They are rscl live wolves and they come .come pretty near getting ' the kids, but the hounds score the first and every round after they .once1 start in. I LOCALS I I i DR. A. C. POSEY, Specialist for Eye, , Ear, Nose and Throat Clseases. Eyes fitted with glasses. Over Stlder's store ' ' ' The Women of Woodcraft willhave! a mystic lunch counter at the I. 0. F. hall, Thursday evening at 8:30 o'clock. Everyone is invited. 6-14-2t I ; Any one desiring to secure, a home stead In central Oregon, call up C. S. t Van Duyn, who can give information regarding the country.. 6-14-2t With McCool, a young baseball play er of Walla Walla, who was here at one time, the La Grande ball team went td Baker today much the same as it has been arranged all season. The team plays three, games there . and Merril Stoddard, erstwhile flrBt , Back er, Is acting mailVr" of the players. N. K. - West's, store building is being freshened in appearance wltn a coat of paint. ' ' The W. C. T. U. imet at the home of iMrs. Worstell tomorrow afternoon at .2:30. ' , ' . , . Right in your busiest season when yon lisve the least time to spare you are most likely to take diarrhoea and lose several days' time, unless you have Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera ana Diarrhoea Remedy at hand and take a dose on the first appear ance of the disease. For sale by all dealers. Wootfell Reunion. The fourth annual reunion of the Woodell family will be held. !n the Woods grove, northeast of La Grando, June 23, 24 and 25. All friends of the family are invited to bring their lunch eon and enjoy Sunday with the fam ily. -vV v ;;:7 Preaching services at, 2: 00 o'clock Sunday afternoon.' D 6-8-22 W 6-8-16 EXGURSIONity $ : f , V , PEKSOXAIS. A .t Faes E as t 1911 From all points on Irene Elliott, of Elgin, was a Savoy (Miont Inst nlffht i 0MGlfv1"S?n JS??! W. J- .Allen of Burleigh. Idaho, & NAVIGATION COMPANY I war a Savn rearer last evenlne. To ' '' . FAKES ' Mr. and Mrs, Jess King went to Ba- cnicago ; .fjz.ou Council Bluffs.. V Omaha' :. ) City ) Ph ...... ly.. ...... .. 60.00 '"iiiiiij"" feMiy. ap Kansas City St. Joseph St.. Paul St. Paul, via Council Bluffs. ..... 63.90 Minneapolis, direct .............. 60.00 j Minneapolis, via Council Bluffs. 63.90 Detroit, Mich 82.30 ! Ttnntnn . . . ' . '. ..Ml 0.00 ' iew lors. , ...jtus.O'j St. Louis ...... . . . . . . .. .... 70.00 Washington, D. C...............107.501 Atlantic City, N. J...., 102.40' Sale Dates June 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 16, 17, 21, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29 and 30. July 1. 2, 3. 4. 5. 6. 19. 20. 26. 27 and 28. August 3 4, 5. 14, 13, 16, 17, 21, 22, 23, 28, 29 and 30. September 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 and 7." ".,"' Stop-overs within limits In either di rection. Final return limit October 3lst One way hrough Calfornia $15.00 ad ditional. Inquire of any O..W. R. & N. A sent for More Complete Information , , or . WM. SfcMURRAY ; General Passenger, Agent, Portland, , Oregon. Welch's and ker today ; with the ball team, and while in Baker will visit with rlends. J. F. Rice of. Lewiston. Idaho, ia stopping at the Sommer today. H. W. Anderson of Pasco, reg'siered at the Sommer last 'night;- i f v i Mrs. Gus Gilbert, . here from Clo quet, Minn., is a guest at the Foley. : C. B. Baker, of Portlands ia staying at ths Foleyl-yju :, . "y. . j W. A. Ogden, 'a' Cove resident, is Btoiiing at the Foley. . - H. A. Vincent, a drug salesman ot Portland," is here today and is at the Sommer. " ' , ' '' ' ' ' David Zimmerle. prominent ' Cove fruit grower and realty owneri stop ped at the Sommer last evening. . Miss Anna De Long was over from Hot Lake this morning and stopped at the Foley. ; ' K V. Stengle of Huntington, is tran sacting business here and is stopping at the Foley.,- "' r Frank Simmons of Vnipn looked af ter business matters here last even ing and stopped at tne Savoy. ' F. J. Lewis, with the Best Manufac turing concern at Walla Wlla, tran sacted business here last night and was at the Savoy hotel . ; S. " D. RIelder, '. a Portland " " paper htiiiBe i salesman., is at the fiommer j while calling on the trade here to-: day..;!;':'l;.yr:('-:-.t'1;:' -y ; Ernest Wilson and wife, R. Wetes and C, Dabson, comprise a Med'cal Springs party staying at the Foley .this afternoon. " ';-v. J. A. Brown, temporary head of the new forest reserve known as the Mln am, was In from Wallowa last night and Btopped at the Sjvoy while here. G. I.; Patten and J. R. Weaver were Elgin visitors In the city last evening and were quartered at the Savoy while here, "'."-'', '''. : ' '. - Charles MIzoguchl. secretary of the local Japanese colony. Is In Baker and will see La Grande and Baker play the series of three games there. Water superintendent George T. Cochra.n who was In Pendleton yes terday, returned last evening and this morning went to North Powder on business. : , '. " ' . Karl Dittebrandt of th?' Dittebrandt Auto y company', arrived 1 home this inornlng from Portland, having pur chased three new Hudsons while In the metropolis. j . s Oscar Ja kson'ls again able to be at his work In the Snodgrass grocery af ter being forced to rest a day or two aft ;r meeting with considerable in Jury to his arm by being u't In ths meat slasher at the store. ARTIFICIAL EYES. The Art of Waking Them Resem ble Their Human Patterns. lassifiedt Advertising Arcade theatre. WANTED A ?lrl to do general housa - work. Phone Black 1422. 6-13-tf MATCH IN SHAPE AND COLOR. Imperial Grape Juke flso Pure Hawaiian Pineapple Juice Just the drink yon want' for this warm weather, and ft full line of fresh fruits and vegeta ble. Royal Grocery H. Pattison, Prop. Hot in the Association IS TO GET ELECTRIC LIGHT WIRING. We will be pleased to figure with you on your house. Work guaranteed. Phone Red 741. t THE ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. BLACK&PRATT Real Estate and Insurance 111 Depot Street CASE TON 6HT TWO BOUND OVER TO GRAND JURY YESTERDAY. Golden and Godsey Are PrincmU In Jiext Case to Come Uy. C. E. Golden against 8. P. Godsey, involving a mini) question, is set as the next case tot come up in circuit court. The Jury will likely get the final arguments and instructions late this afternoon' in the Grande Ronde Cash company's case, commenced yes terday morning. . . Work, for Grand inry. Joe. Banterey and E. C. Henry waiv ed examinations yesterday before Jus tice Williams on charges of burglary and were bound over to the grand Jury on ?.,00 bonds each. ' These two men are accused of hav ing stolen some tools from W. W. Crawford. " , ,. '; Muscles May MovvThamselves. . Albert von Ilaller. a Swiss surgeon of the eighteenth century, was the first to point out that the muscles of our bodies have an automatic action. Before flaller's time it was believed that the muscles conld not contract or well , op , of ; themselves, but were drawu up by the nerves of volition. Haller discovered that this is not so, but that a muscle. If Irritated, will draw Itself ' together automatically, even when It Is quite separated from the oervett, and this has since been proved to be true by a great number i w experiments, bo mat. uongn it is ! true our nerves are the cause of our moving, because they excite the mus cles and so cause them to contact, yet the real power of contraction Is In the muscle lue!f. The body of man Is full of wonders, not the least of whlcb is this automatic power of contraction la all muscles. Louisville Courier JonrnaL They Fit tha Ey 8ocket Perfectly and May. Even Be Worn During Sleapirig Hours Mada of Glasa, For Which Na Substitute Has Yet Bean Found. ' i ' Germany leads all other countries in the manufacture of artltk-iai eye The American consul general at , C burg relates tbat probably ever slm e the beginning of the world civilized people have endeavored to bide or remedy any flaw la their appearance, such: as ht loss of an' eye wouui cause. Bow this was done by the vu rlous nations it ia bard to say. Cp to the present time no discoveries have been made tbat would offer enlighten . ment on this subject. There are, It Is true, a few unauthenricated accounts as- far back as the middle' ages, but the first reliable report is given by the French surgeon Ambrolse Tare In 15C0. Two kinds of artificial eves were known to him, the. ekblepbaros and the hypoblepbaros. The ekblepharus was made by painting the eye and all surrounding parts us fur as the brows oo a plate, which was placed In front of the eye socket and held In position by siring tied over the bead.' The hypoblepbaros was used la a manner similar to that of today, being put be hind the eyelid.' In the eye socket It self, and was composed of a metal shell of copper, silver or gold, covered with enamel and glass fusions. ' : It was only at the close of the eight eenth century tbat these artificial eyes really became of practical use. It being then found possible to do away with the metal shell altogether and employ enamel and glass. , The material used was a soft lead glass, easily shaped, but also easily destructible, and , an eye had to be renewed every three or four months to prevent the socket from becoming affected. ..... It Is known tbat in the middle of the nineteenth century eyes were, made by enamelers tn Dresden, Prague. London and Stockholm, and In Thurlngia. The Thnringlan makers were not enamel ers, but glassblowers working In con nection with the porcelain painting In dustry, whose endless-and untiring experiment resulted In the discovery of an ideal material, cryolite glass, the use of whlcb led to a new technique In eye manufacture. Moreover, there can now be produced all the charac teristics of the human eye which had been possible in enamel work. The new prosthetic eye received the name "reform eye." To be of value, how ever, It must be made to exactly fit the eye socket Today it is possible to give to the re form eye any form and color desired, and in most cases It can be even worn at nfgbt, thereby preventing the lid from sinking Into the socket and the lashes from sticking together. . At times attempt! have been made to re place the breakable glass by vulcanite or celluloid, but such efforts have long since been given up as useless. In 1852 the method used in France for making eyes was as follows: On the broadly pressed end of a small, colorless, transparent rod of enamel the pupil was first made, and the iris was then formed on this by means of a small, thin pointed, coloped enameled rod. the designing of the Iris being made possible by melting the point of this rod. la Pari the good eyes are now so made. A glass tube, closed at one end and of the color of the sclerotic, is next blown into the form of an oval, and in the middle of this a bole is melted, the edges of which are round ed off evenly and pressed a little out ward. The iris Is then placed In this opening and well melted In. A thick coating of glass remains behind. The eye is rounded off. the projecting rim ot the white coat is smoothed with a metal rod. and this coat Is thereby joined to the sclerotic. By means of a thin, pointed red rod the blood vessels to be seen on the bard coat of the human eye are then melted In. The superfluous back part of the eyeball is melted off. thereby giving to the eye the desired form. The eye is Anally placed on hot sand, where, it becomes gradually cooled off. ' " ' - Glass eyes are made In quite a dif ferent manner In Lnuseha. the center of this industry In Germany, where their manufacture Is altogether a houne industry. The eyes are uunlly made by one member of a family, and the art is handed down from one gen' eratlon to uuotber. A gas" flame-Is used for melting the glass. A 'small drop of white glass is put on the white blown ball, from which the sclerotic Is to be made and Is then blown so as to make a circle abont eight millimeters 0.315 inchi In din meter On UiIh cir cle the structure of the Iris Is' built by means of variously colored glass rods. A drop of black glass makes the pupil. Over the finished Irln crystal glass Is melted in ordw to Imitate tbe cornea. The further manufacture Is similar to that given In tbe first description. . ACREAGE WANTED Want 10 to 25 acres, according to price, In Grande Ronde valley. Will turn In on ac ' count of price of acreage a $900 tquity Jn new home In Portland. Hou seattractive, laa da cad out. Furnace. Picture at office. II. Cof. fin, , owner." . 1107 , ACas . r.vcnu9. Pone Main 1. Dufcc! Che FOR. SALE House of five rooms . modern Improvements. Bath, hot ', and cold water. Three blocks from round house. Phone Black 1191 ' . X 6-12-6t .' . ' NEW' HAY FOR SALE-AVe will sell all or part of 80 acre8 of 'grain hay to be taken In field at 17.00 per ton. La Grande Investment Co. 6-l4-10t WANTED Two furnished "rooms foi light housekeeping. Apply 10G Fir street.' ' ' , . C-12-3t FOR RENT gUit ; 0f " housekeeping rooms with bath and laundry room. Swartz house, Phone Black 3711. 'v:;--'' 6-io-tf FOR RENT A furnlBhde bungalow. All modern furniture. House open ; for ; inspection Monday from 9 a. m. to , 5 p. m. Mrs. C. J. Scriber; corner of First and Grandy. , : ' 6-9-ll-4t LOST A hay horse, weight about 1,- 060 pounds, branded G on left shoul ' der. ' Anyone finding him call the Newlln .Drng company. 6-8-tf WANTED A good second-hand light buggy. Call Black 842; H ti-3-tf FOR SALE Windmill in good running order, complete for a 20 foot well Inquire 2008 Second street. Fred Synhorst. j 5-7-tf FOR SALE Three of the best resi dence lots in the city. Want small . payment, good terms on balance Address owner at Box 244, city 6-5-tf FOR SALE Furniture for Ave roorsc " complete, prictically newonly used ten months, call Black 1192. STRAYED Bay gilding, 2-year-old, branded II right shoulder; bob tail: came to our pasture about April 1st. , Mires & Clarke, La Grande, Ore. f-o-lOt Fresh every other day, , 1 Made bj Mrs, Couch of Island t'lty, which is a guarantee as to , 'quality and cleanlliwus. t T Kntil In onr (nunfttr at X 20c a Pint by I Pattison Bros. '; Phone Black 8L . ! " r V ANTED All the boys In La Grande between 10 and 16 years old to join the Boys' Savers' club. Call at the laundry and I will tell you all about It. A. B. Cherry, mgr. Cherry's New Laundry. Choic.eGt Candie 1 ( There is nothln-g desirable iu candles but what we carry.- Our line Includes all the standard favorites, some of which are SaHetf" Almonds Chocolate Almonds, -4 ; '., Chocolate Assorted 'uts, etc The befct candy factories of .the west are represented here by their choicest producti.i - FOR RENT Star theatre; will be re modeled for store room. Inquire at It is worth while to get candies of us because you get fresh, hi e-h grade goods. . , . Wright Drug Co, TUBE DBUG DRUGGISTS. Centennial Jubilee ASTO 1 R I A r" , AUGUST 10 TO SEPT. 9, 1911 Commemmoratlng the One-Hundredth Anniversary of . the First White Set--tletnent In ,th Northwest and the Be ginning of the Oregon Country at Aa-. .. torla, Oregon, presenting historical, and ceremonial features, together with ! t 1 i SPECTACULAB MABIXK AND MILL -1 IT ART FAGEA3T. '. ' , Glen , CurtlBS, famous aviator, will fly over land and sea In his airship., . PACIFIC COAST REGATTA. The geratest aquatic event to be held " -;; In the West. j Historically this .celebration is to be one'-of the most, important events ' to take place this year in the United States. . ,'' v , ' . . t , " The Oregon-Washington Biillroad k Xavlpatlon company will sell ticket from all points on its lines, including branches at LOW ROJJND TRIP RATES For further particulars apply to the Centennial Committee, Astoria, Ore gon, or to WM. McMURRAY, Gen'l Pass. Agent., PorUand, Ore.