PAGE 2 1A OUAm, UNION COUNTY, OREGON. TUESDAY, JULY II, 1911. Directory of the Fraternal Orders of La Grande, Oregon LF.t A. M. La Grande Lodge No. 41. A 5 & A. M. hold! reaula. meet- I lugs first and third Saturdays at ' 7:30 p. m. Cordial welcome to all Masons. I M. HOYT. W. M. A. C. WILLIAMS, Secretary. B. P. O. E. La Grande Lodge No. 433 meets each Thursday evening at 8 o'clock In Elk't dub. corner of De pot street and Washington avenue. "Visiting brothers are cordially tn ' vlted to attend. IL J. HITTER, Ex. Rai. H. E. COOLIDGE, Rec. Bee. wmmnpj nv nra wnTttn La Grande Lodge No. 169 W. 0. W , meets every second and fourth Sat 7 urdays at K. P. halL All visiting - raebers welcome. D. FITZGERALD, C. C. J. H. KEENET. Clerk. M.W. A. La Grande Camp No. 7703 meets every Monday in tne uwuui It the I. 0. O. F. ban. All visiting neighbors are cordially invitej to attend. E. E. DANIELS, ED. HEATH. Clerk. Queer Anatomy. J Curious Ideas about anatomy prevafl 1 ay that a man was "shot In the ticket Sce." Another paper says a man wa shot In the suburbs." "He kissed bet passionately upon her reappearance." "Ebe whipped him upon her return." "He kissed her back." "Mr. Jones walked In upon her invitation." "She tated herself upon his entering." "Wt thought she sat down upon her being asked." "She fainted upon his depar ture." A Regular Hamlet Player. 1 "Did you ever play . In 'Hamlet?"' Inquired a theatrical manager of a re cent acquisition to his company. "Ever!" exclaimed the newcomer. "Why. I've played in every hamlet of Great Britain !" Loudon TU-BIts. "f ' ilVe are carry. a complete line of the following Jars, Caps, and rubbers, ' ' .MASONS, V . SCH1UM, : ' ... ' . EOONl.MY, ' .SEAL FAST Extra thick rubbers anA caps T for each kind. For Sale Only by Pattison Bros. fhoue Black SL ' I Fruit ;:p-:k i-i'-:'.v::';:-:JarS GRAWDE RONDE MEAT CO. Uses only Refrigerator Counters , and they show our cut meals ina' most sanitary and appetizing my TWO MARKETS J. E. Bradley 6 Go. SANITARY KEl'Altt WORK. niosESi shop black 7i. RES1BCXCJE BLACK I":EBEKAHS "rystal LoVe No. W meets every Tuesday evening In th I. O. O. F. hall. All visiting mem bers are invited to attend. MRS. KATIE ARBUCKLE. N. G. MIS3 ANNA ALEXANDER, Bee KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Red Cros - Lodge No. 27 meass every Monday night in Castle hall, (old Elk's tall.. A Pythian welcome to all vlsltto Knights. JESS PAUL. C. C. - R. L. LINCOLN. M. of R. B. O. E. S. Hope Chapter No. 13, O. E C. hoi stated communications th second and fourth Wednesdays oi ear h month. Visiting members cor dlally Invited, t CARRIE B HUNTER. W. M. MARY A. WARNICK. Bee WOMEN OF WOODCRAFT OraB" Ronde Circle No. 47 meets first au rul'd Thursday eve. in the mo. iJ,e : 0 All visIUag- ' u.bers are Feared Burial Alive. The dread of premature burial wbo haunted Harriet Martlnean would certainly not be classed as a fanciful person, and she bequeathed 10 to her doctor to see that her body was decapitated before burial. - Ed mund Yates In bis will stipulated that his Jugular vein should be severed and left 20 to pay for the operation. Lady Burton took even stronger pre cautions. She enjoined that her heart should be pierced with a needle before any steps were taken to certify her death and that her body should after ward be submitted to a postmortem examination. London Chronicle. Lucky or Not. : . "Eve was really a very lucky wom an." remarked Mr. Heupeque. "She didn't have any woman to criticise her clothes." Mrs. flenpeque's eyes snapped. "On the other band." she retorted, "she didn't have any woman around to envy the first ttowns a noma o ever kad." Cincinnati' Commercial Tribune. Life. V Life Is the finest or the One arts. It has to be learned wttb lifelong pa tlence. and the yean ot our pilgrim T.nges are all too short to master it trt- . i. . i r . . - umiJUBUUj , vi uiuuiuiiii. . Hor Sacrsd Word. ' "Not golnu to Alice's luncheon? But you gave your sacred word!" "So t did, and I'd go In u minute If my dress bad couie home." Harper's Bazar. . v ' ", -..- :. We must laugh tiefore we are happy or else we may die before we ever laugh nt all -La Bruyere. '" - . Relief. Gabber V'ou ouuht to meet ; Smith. ', Awfully clever Imitator! lie can take ' he were here uow. VarMy LUew j 8trongly Oppoatd. I "Are ymi Id favor of granting suf frage to women 7" , ; "No. sir." replied the man wbo was chewing tobacco. "If women were at- i lowed to go to the polls the election judges would have to go outside to spit" Chtcaao Record-Uern Id BOTH PHONES PLUMBING A SPECIALTY. NEXT DOOR TO CITY HALL CROCKS m Oil HQHESTY COMPARED WITH HONEST 3fES THEY ARE "HONEST." ; Xews From Jiew York; of Interest Man Falls One JDle. New York, July 11 (Special) That many crooks are honest men as com pared to many local merchants Is the novel complaint made here by two self-confessed thieves this week who have been looting many, retail jewelry etorea by what Is known in the slang of the underworld as the "penny weight game.', Th method of opera tion is simple, necessitating merely the services of two men and a watch. Having selected a Btore to be robbed the first man enters and asks to look at diamond ring. While thus engaged his partner enters apparently In a mutt hurray, shoves a watch under the jeweler's hose and asks to have it repaired, giving his partner an op portunity to substitute imitation gems for real ones and to depart with his booty. The grievance of these thieves has just been voiced in an Ingenious letter written to a local je weler's trade paper In whtch they accuse the retail jewelers of being "an "enterprising band of up-to-date bandits," contin uing, "as an instance of their kgn slghted thievery we call your atten tion to the fact that our famous watch which you Bay we always wished "fixed right away' has never been out of repair since we sole It, but, never theless, every store we visited, and we visited 138 of them, hag succeeded In finding something the matter with this watch of ours and has found some excuse to charge us anywhere from 25 cents to $3.60, which they never col lected, for doing everything from op ening the cover' to wjndlng it up for us." New York haa not enjoyed such a naive Indictment In many years. Mail Robberies Rare. : The recent holdup of a mall train In which the robbers escaped with the registered mall Is cited by postal aj thorltles here ns emphasizing the rar ity of losses of this kind. While hun dreds of millions of dollars are trans ported by maiC the total Indemnity paid by the pofltolfico during the past yean on account of train robberies was only $769. Much of the disinclin ation on the part of the professional highwaymen to Interfere with Uncle Sam's property; 1b undoubtedly due to the reputation which the old gentlu- man has gained of never lettng up on the trail of a peculator and of eventu ally "landlne" every man who tvieB to prey upon the mails. Another rea son for the comoaratlve Infrequency of train robberies undoubtedly is that by far th greater part of the mail is now transported by the railroads and it i3 a much more difficult matter to hold up a fast train than a stage coach or star route carrier. By the Increase In the use of the railways as mall car riers the government gains in. two ways for not only Is railway transpor tation far safer but It is also cheaper, j In fact the railways claim that the rates paid by them by the governmen for carrying the mallg are so low that they lose soruei millions of dollars a year on this end of their business, nnJ as the postmaster general after inves tigating nearly 400 lines has Just re ported that more than a quarter of them are underpaid, the loss which they suffer In this connection is vast-j ly , greater than that . which arises from the depredations of . would-be Imitators of Jesse James. That this occupation offer8 small chance of profit Is shown by the fact that In the past two years, according to postofnee records, there have been in the entlrn country only nine train robberies In volving the malls and it Is said that even in the latest holdup the mall train was attacked through mistake by bandits who were really after henvy gold shipment traveling by ex press on another train. Falls a Mile, 1'nhutt. Falling more than a mile without Injury Is the record which has Jim been sot here by a man known to hts fellow workers fs "Nine LUvs Tim" and tho "human cat." who Is neither an aeroplanlst nor balloonist but a painter who has done his falling with out the aid of any artificial mfnns cf support. He rounded out fc't two hundredth fall of 25 feet or over this we by tumbling 1C0 feet from the eighth story of a building In which he 'ia at work, landing on his feet and escaping without any more seri ous injury than damage to his trous ers tnough had it not been for the in tervention of telegraph, wlreg which broke his fall iits likely that this would have been his last tumble. Only three weeks ago he fell fifty feet from another building and his record In cludes 20 fallg from barns, 3& from trws, and more than 100 from the roofs of residences. ; Falls in bicycles, fences and down stairs have been so numerous that their total has not been kept, since the human cat, regards them as entirely too trivial to remem ber. But ln spite of his peculiar pro clivity for taking unexpected drops, he always lands on his feet and has not a scar to ehow for his mile of tum bling. " So accustomed has he become to miraculous escapes that he now believes that a fall from the highest building In the city would leave him unscathed. - TRADITIONS. Thtir Absence Was a Serious Handicap to Aoam and Evo. The great drawback to tbe garden of Eden was the lack of traditions Tbere was no history to serve m i TO Tr"', -"'' ;r mwIhI rati tude. There was neither Baedeker nor Kldpath. uelther Macaulay nor Gib bon, neither Homer nor Vergil. Adam and Eve could not go to tbe library, haul down a book and see bow some body once did something or. otber There were no daugbtent of anything to set the. standards of social emi nence. There were no old families. There were no descendant of any: body to talk big, took wise and druw pensions. . Tbere were no forefathers wbo bad laid down Inviolable laws, contracted debts, given ; away fran chises aud established constitutions for posterity, aye. even unto the third and fourth generation. There were no historic statesmen wbo had band ed down orations for Adam and Eve to learn and recite at bigb school com mencements and church socials. There were no dates for them to learn and remember. There was absolutely no past for them to .revere: nothing that bad stood tbe test of time. If tUey wanted history or tradition tbey had to go a bead and make It themselves. Ellis O. Jones In Judge's Library. TABLE KNIVES. Incident That Changed Them From Pointed to Rounded Ends. Table knives are Invariably made with rounded ends. Did It 'ever occur to you to wonder why they are of this shape Instead of pointed, like any oth er knife blade? . Perhaps you may imagine that the ends were rounded as a protection to life and limb In those turbulent days when . men drew their swords or any otber available lethal weapon at tbe very slightest provocation. , ; But this Is not the case. Tbe story goes and it Is fairly well substan-tlated-thnt the great Cardinal Riche lieu had a guest to dinner whose man ners ut the table were vwy far from being nil thnr mu!d be desired. Tbe climax , was reached when the fellow, after finishing the meat course, began to pick bin teeth wltb hls'tnbie knife, at that d:iu made with a sharp point. The guest being a man birth and importance, the cardinal could not openly remonstrate, but next day be gave orderM that the point of every knife tu the establishment should be rounded off Before the end of tbe century his ex ample was universally followed, and tbe pointed knife at table had disap peared. London Answers. .' Swimming Ghosts., Lecturing (fore the Camera club. Or Francltt Ward said that In an at tempt to photograph fish In their nat ural surroundings be had constructed a pond wltb nu olmervatloti chamber let In at tbe side below Uie surface ot the water. Through tbu window of this chamber unseeu by the fish be could watch and photograph their movements. He discovered by this means that the protection of fish when In tbelr natural state is much more thorough than is generally supposed. All silvery fish were in reality merely mirrors In tbe water, reflecting the tone and color of tbelr surroundings so as to appear to tbelr fellow fish Auction Sale, Horses La Grande, Saturday, July 15, at the StLouis Stables 12 head work horses; wVs from 1100 to 1600 lbs. ages from 3 to 1 1 years. AH smoth stock, several were mated teams. Good notes will be accented navable rw . 1 I Ed Stringham, auctioneer gray, unsubstantial, swiuuniug ghosts, bardly to be distinguished at all. it was only when tbe dace, for example, rose to the surface, causing Its body to reflect light tbnt tbe pike at the bottom of tbe pond could see and go for its little victim. London Graphic. England's Croam Ponies. Tbe famous cream ponies which are nsed to draw tbe king's carriage on state occasions are the sole survivors of a breed of horses which has oth erwise passed out of existence. They are the direct and only pure bred de scendants of ,' tbe famous Dorses of Hanover, wblcb Ueorge ' 1. brought with him to bis new Engll.h kingdom two centuries ago. Tbe once famous white homes and black horses of Han over have died . out. and now the creams alone survive, and only in England, for when Queen Victoria sent to Hanover about 18!K) to procure fresh stock for tbe royal stud not one was to be found. London Answers. . Reputation. Reputation is oue of tbt prizes for whtcU men contend. It Is. as Mr Burke rails It. "the cheap defense and ornament of nations and the nurse or manly , exertions." It produces more labor and more talent rban twice ill wealth ot a country could ever rear up It is tbe coin of genius, and It is the imperious duty of every, man to be, tow ft with the most scrupulous Jus- j Oce and the. wisest' economy. -Kvdney . Smith.' ' : - A Nsw Interpretation. History lencher ; vvimt ronspruon feature figured lu HarrisioL's cam palgnf t'npll-ln the hl orrw-essioii thev linn a iog cabin wun a colored man tied on top. History . Teacher -A wnarr Pupil-Well, my history says there was a live conn fastened on tne root Lippliicott's. , i Phone Red 971 next door to Observer office. That's What It's Good For rJetteir HRST ANNUAL Ctierfy Fair at COVE, ORE., JULY 19th "Come where the Luscious Cherry Grows" I Great Fruit Display Sports of all kinds Base Ball Game Exhibition of Fancy Shooting Excursion on . Garfish Skin. A woman looking Vt costly Jewel cases In one of (lit- iint espnislvf ut the uptown siHips tne other day was struck witn Hie uHnuiifm. Ivory like finish ot a iiii:niM'f ot thtTJi. .' Wliui are they inudf ut':" "tie n.Kid admir ingly, "tiiii'ti-u "Kin. iimdiini; ' answer ed the HiiletuiiHti.' "5:ii tiMi leather, we find, is very little known ul'out out side of thetrade, and yet It niiH-eome to he of tmniin-e. It not only caa be worked up to Hie- ollsn, but It t, wonderfully hard They ny i-ertaln trllM- ot iiidlnuM knew Its secret, and; that iiuiong them it was used an ar mor, the tradition being that a breast plate of It would rexlst any tomahawk or arrow. It caa be made now so that It will turn the edge f a knife or a spear." .New York . Sun. He Likod tho Lta. William was said to be the ugli est thong! the most lovable man tm Louisiana. . On returning to the plan tation after a short absence bis brotb er said: "Willie. I met in New Orleans a Mrs. Forrester, wbo Is a great admirer of yours. She said, though, that it wasn't so much the brilliancy of your mental attainments as your marvelous phys ical and facial beauty which charmed and delighted , ber." "Edmund." cried William earnestly, "that Is a wicked He. but ten it tu u again r Everybody's. ; ' n. .:.. I tr. t WUlliMI , Wl W I WW. Boy My tootb aches, and mamma aid I should come here and let you fook at It Dentist I see. It must come out Won't take but a minute. Now. be a brave little man. and I'll Boy (hastily backing offi Mamma didn't say I should let you pull It She only said 1 should let you look at It Faints as they paint in cities and makes reason i able charges: Consult him about your Vrvorii. They All Say JSSf What Ails You Central Railroad W.H.Berry, owner, f 1