PAGE 4 LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1911. .- THP 'OBSERVER ! ,CRn people bavt beD tahen off their tllinS him that he wa suffering from . ieei in me past Dy neaps or iaJK anai a, vaivuiar aisease or toe neart. At- 'BRUCE DENNIS Editor and Owner. f sirred at the postoffice at La Grande as second-class matter. 8UBSCKIPT10X BATES 'DsfTy, single copy ........... Dally, per week, Dally, per month.-.....'. ........ 6c lit I1JZI3JJLSZZI9II 2 9 16 10 17 232425 T W Ik, 3031 5 12 19 26 6 13 14 20121 2728 1 15 22 29 littl work." If Canadian reciprocity j proves to be what Taft thinkg It will ! ell other public men will be forgotten for the time and Tie will occupy the exact center., of public thought. It doeB not stand to reason that a man of his reasoning would fight hard for a measure upon which hinged his future success or failure unhss h honestly thought that measure would benefit the majority of the peopl:. If you will pin your faith to Taft you will not resrret It. He Is belne anureclated more and more each day of his admin- - jjstratlon and by the time his term of , office ehall have expired we bslleve ! the whole country will be asking for i his renomlnatlon. i A HEROINE OF THE FLAGl'E. j It was during the cholera epidemic ; oi iau inai miss Annie uuuuen, a j girl missionary among the Himalayan j foothills, found to her dismay that the j dread disease had Invaded her moun tain station. The Instant It was dis covered, the Eureopean residents and i all the native officials fled In terror, They begged lrer to go to, but her , sUnse of duty would not let her go. j , "The only way to save my people," higher mountain." It was 12 miles away. There were -. ATTEJiD.THE PIONEER MEETING - Everyone who possibly can should attend ,tbe Pioneer meeting at Elgin " a ., m ouuiruay. inai cuy arranging ror several scores to be moved, most of a Dig time ana is going to entertain them women and children, but she tb old settlers in a way that will ( managed to move them. all. to provide .cause mem 10 long rememDer tneir, canvas coverings for ttf:m, to establish treatment. ' j proper sanitary condlrlons and to mln- So far a known .most of the early j tster to tht sick; for the village, doc settlers of La Grande will be pre'stnt tor had run away and "left hi Job' and review the days that tried men's ' with her. ,. fcouls on the raw frontier. They will ' suddenly she was sent for to treat a tell once mors' the stories which if very sick woman twenty miles away, woven into a story would be the equal The coolies had all fled, but she found of anything that hag ever, been print- sn Indian pony and rode six hours t From out Wallowa .will come! alone throuah th tnrrM hpat tin .h. those sern old mpuutalnerrs who en tered this faster Oregon 1 rpuntry when safety was a question; whm . Indians roamed thesn, bills ) reached the woman's home. It was co late. She was dead. t There were no men to be found, but a few Christian womwi lived In the neighborhood, and cfnyofll Bq fguea tuis section homo, i they .helped MlBS Budden to carnr the men would like to do, but the VttjVrs 'end dig In those days It meant death to do a body, to the; utPk'rtl of the village grave, ai noon, in Drave -u"5 m?t "? VTO? .nUslonary md th, burial ser- through these"hills and proclaim 'aw j own canto." svr ' and order both to red and wbfteTThat , She gone but eight miles when n time finally came, but It took yea of j enakeNughten?d her horse and she - lsolatlpn and privation on the par; ofrwaslhrown'off, Hi rah sway and til many before It reached them. - ' " wajk'd th.e remalnlns twelve miles.. At wpenences aurmimosi' times mil, Jiightlall she was wl:h her own peo- ne repeated, thief Joseph aJid ,is Kp)e again, but only to find that one of banflspf lndlantwjllfrequently.be the-.her woma .had. died during h?r ab subject of discussion, and -withal HUfnee. Immeirlately another burying . - A I A. 1 . . . -U . ' wm v. ? "Bt inv5eSung g nenng. equaa nad d Us organhsd ,and with Elgin hopes to maks.U, ai ,red letter her own. hands -she helped to lay her -. y nd to' that end,. every citizen , la poor friend Tn. . the grave. But this was throwing open his tyme to th? v,isl- thf onlyvdAta rtiat Occurrsd amons tors, ix you ecw$, to, go, ypay.nljer p5oplend.he was able to con Qt assurea ..nai. you wyj (pe yitertatn-r duct theDS-all' back to their homes ed dierentlr from any. time In, your when 'tlJf f tfaneer hadpassed. The I're Because it Is a a.'fferent occasion. IChriBtiari-Herald. : , , ... : "V.;.'.: ,-.,rr- TAFT SIRE TO BE EEQMJiAtEBTAlMS MOXEY ITSDER FALSE ..'v-.'.' r X' Vl;fU ' PRETENSES.' : The statf: of Nebraska' blAzidt tf r. ' ' . . , tfau m la.fnetw or Tart s. rehwif: The, case of 'John J. Arberry; the natioa -l'W;,1l.ntttrgnt .t California quack, whoconducting a en an Icy receptiosatd thcqaWnt'medical lnstliutf under the name of tion went strong for president. And "Dr. Taylpr & Co.." was convlced of mat is wnat will follow ail over the obtalnlngjnoney by false pretenses. country ''Iiat opposition that exists ' wa. related:t rome length linThe will nriveif. get, any place because It ; Journal. January 29. 1910.- This: case , Is noi rlgB-s that It should. Taft Is' was of Interest bscause of several un making thef. president of thtg genera-J usual features connected with" the berry's defense was that he had mads a mistake In diagnosis and that all physicians may disagree In such mat ters, air. waiur Kaurman, the at torney who was prosecuting the case, however, held that this was a matter of fact and not of opinion; a conten tion that the court fipheld.r , So vital to the quack fra.ernity were 'the points raised in thlg case that theli- an Fran cisco members were said to have rais ed a purse of $25,000 to fight the case. Nevertheless, Arberry was convicted. Of course, h appealed;, the dec'sion of the court of appeals is given at sonU' leng.h In the medical depart ment of this issue of the Journal. The appellate cpurt affirmed the Judg ment of the lower court, convicting Arberry of obtaining money by false pretenses. . Moreover, the ; supreme court of California denies a rehearing. It will be appreciated, of course, that Arberry was not tried for practicing without a license the usual way of atfemptlng to chfck these Impudent frauds but for obtaining money un der false pre'ensea. The Journal has heretofore suggested that this method is much more advisable, and will more readily appeal to the public, than prosecuting a man for the practice of meuiciuti M-iiiiuui i t?.?.'x ter of fact, these advertising quacks do haw. licenses and hence aro proof against prosecution so far as this Is concerned. As we remarkel once be fore, the important point is that under such charges the quack becomes . ' a common felon. While th layman may experience difficulty ln'recoanlzlng the danker of quackery per se, he finds no such obs'acle in a cas'ei of plain rob bery. The average man Is perfectly willing to play fast and' loose with h!r health but he objects to any such of debris.' and at comparatively li: tit i expense. The plan commission Is alio harsh treatment of his pursr. Let flit public once realize the quackery and robbery are usually synonymous, and the outcome of legal action inatituteo against quacks may be safely 'predlct ed. Journal of the, Amsrfcin Medical Asoclatlon, July 22,1911.. ; . - 7 These W arm Summer Days D emand i Our reduced prices during Mid-Season sale made this an opportune time for you to select garments that are I cooli comfortable and stylish. You can save from one fourth to one half the price at West's Mid-Season Clearance Sale tion. He Is doing things and talking little. His career Is one of hard think ing and hard working while the Amer prosecution. Arberry tried to obtain money from a young man, who had come fn from the country, by falsely Old Friends and New Winning permanent, lasting friends is the work of time, and this bank numbers among its .clients, hundreds cf banks and business houses with whom ithashad close relations for a great part ' of the ' : twenty-four years of its existence. v Our friends have helped to make this one of the ; largest and strongest banks in the West. . We have helped in their making, too. We welcome new friends and will attend to their wants with the same fidelity which has cemented our relations with our older ones. " . La Grande National Bank ' LA GRANDE, OREGON. : CAPITAL ; . . $ 100,000.00 . SURPLUS . . . 100,000.00 RESOURCES . . .1,100.000.00 UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY Fred J. Holmes,' Pres. W. J. Church. Vxa" Pres. I F. L.Meyert, C&shiei Earl Zundelss'i. Cashier 4MMinni iiiiinMniiiiiiMMiiimiM Qagtier'i 8uprVtion. , " Theophiie Qautler, the critic, noyelist and poet, like many another great mati. .va siinerstltloua Mlercd b the evil eye . OffeubttCh "vtiT bi aversion, and In thin respect a rarls contemporary telh us that one day the son aha fattier were wr iking together. The eon tbr wickedness' sake, start td tftnversatlon about Offenbach, and bis father gave him to understand that the subject, was disagreeable. Koth Ing daunted.be lad. led Gantler to a shop window where whs exposed a photograph of the composer. . ,. As tbey resumed their walk the son observed, "Well,' you Bte, father, after all, nothing has happened through looking ot the photogtapV At that moment tbey were taraiag the corner, and the son. redecl Wa father In foil view J ho Ipafesetftoy Gautier nd wlhffitiered to "his lOrtnentor a paternal Wefc.'iobTtifa, haft ln .'anger and half la fiuoiev, "Well, Hdinething lias hup ipewed." . . ' . 'tlgrltrCoirars. ' M'rltlKg ln the 'Hospital, tondon, Dr. ,WalfortlxrrtnieerTb6d.v acalust tlirbt 'Itolleirs 'H '(.ousi'dpfj, jt remarkable thnt Uo, 0ne";ecni8 fo have noticed or, ;st,anyrnfe,'1rbinitve luld great stress wn tb-futtHlwt'such slight obstacles 'to the -free circulation of tho blood through the Vessels of tbe brain may adversely Influence the health of those who are' In tbe habit of wearing tight ly '-fitting 'neckcloths, "The fact ap pears ! to' b well known to veterinary surgeons, who tell us that neck con striction through badly fitting harness la. a-causative factor in staggers In horsea." says the writer. . It seems to be'erjually well known that dogs suf 'fWl a groat deal through having' to wear tightly fitting collars. Is It too much, then. Dr. Watford asks, to argue that those of ns who wear our own collars too tightly buttoned may find In tb practice some explanation of symptoms ascribed to other causes? Tiny Rapublies. Klein-Alp is a diminutive republic rocked away between Switzerland and France. Only In summer Is the re public Inhabited , and then by minera and cowgirls. There is one hotel, closed during tho winter. Another little re public Is In Tyrol, 'between Austria and Italy, and In long gone years was under the Jurisdiction of first a, Xing and then an emperor. But in tbe ad justment of frontier lines the state of Val di Ventlno was In some wsy over looked, and it promptly organised It self Into a lllllputlau republic. It has now about 2.000 Inhabitant living U six villages. Neither Val di Ventlno nor Kleln-Alp has any taxes.. There are no officials or compulsory military I services. The only Industry of Val di Ventlno, aside from tbe farming of ( small fields, is charcoal burning. I Savings in Dry Reductions in Special Prices , Goods Ladies "ready- from Men's ".. ., "'V, to-wear Dept" Department All summer lawns re . ' ' ""''.''.. ' " ' ' v duces 23 per ciit : Er!r lin summer Fntire line of, men's ' ' ' ... ..' .' ; ' Cresset, silks, serges, and bovs closing All white waislings marquisettes, lawns, reduced reduced 25 per cent reduced 25 per cent 25 per Ce at ... -.;. r, . ..... , , . -. 60 ladies tailored suits . All summer parasols exac ly one half price Men'r dress pants re- reduced 20 per; cent Entirc ,ine la die. coat. duced 25 pef CCPt All : UtW annd. r. Fof w Sllpons.. Silk. Boy.V Knickerbocker AH leather good, re- woo$ redUCed 25 per pant, reduced 25 per duced 25 perceut cent cent HALF PRICE MILLINER Y SALE r tir Entire line of Oxfords reduced 10 per cent Sale closes Tuesday, August 1st , The Quality Store -- -- ' His Tribute of Respect. The freckle faced boy who was about to be emancipated from high school thraldom was writing bis grad uating essay. ' a-. , "I suppose I ought to wind it up;" he reflected, "with something, topchlng and sentimental about the' leather headed, snub nosed, squeaky voiced conceited old snoocer . that runs thu sbebaug." , , , . ; . ".-'-i : Thoreuon he. wrote, "And now. our dir and honored principal, we turn 'to you," etc. Chicago Tribune. THE GROCERY Stageberg & Sandborg . ; Phone 70. 'We handle Van Camp 6 Snydefs Potk and Beans, Libby's Veal Loaf, Lunch Tongue and Chipped Beef. i in 1 ft ...v..;;v.".. ..... .. . ' ,'; ' ' - '. Distributor of ' ' ; The Walger New Model Awning The Best Awning Ever Put Up v I uir5le1r Residences, Summer Resorts, Office and U Hotel Buildintrs Rrhfri TT aAZlr I . , , , , "'--i -v-vwi Muiusca, x attunes, eic. Hammodu, Ice Cream Vr r Pork,, Tents, ad wki Co (Ke ; LA GRANDE, OREGON PHONE, BLACK mi. V : is iSlo.s. iSh,a a so. f . W WJLw f"fl" " Mlled Milk Chocolate with egg, Egg Lwnidei Egg Phosphate, Orange Punch and Electric Drink Mixer ttfi SELLER'S 1 !;;' is