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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1912)
... !-; m : f; ' ' .1 PAGE 4 TttL ObSLRVER S BRUCE D E'N NiS . '; Editor and Owner, Catered at the postofflce at La Grande as second-class matter. - ' , hrBSCRiraON BATES. 9Sij, uglj copy ............... 6e BtUt per week " ' 1 1 1B Bally, per month .65c OVT BE AN IBEX. A contributor to the Saturday Eve nine PoBt has Invented a new name fw a mossbaek Ibex, which leads to, the following adaptation from his ar ticle by the Roaeburg Review: - Assuming that a mossbaek, or Ibex, la a typical RoBeburger which,, of wcourae, he Isn't but assuming for the lake of argument that he Is, there la at once a striking difference between a typical Roseburger and a typical realdept of any other Oregon city that ! grooving rapidly, such as Eugene, a fair examnle ot the Wllla- niettealley, or Metyejrflfcfc-die sbuthj or Hood River, or La Grande In BasH em Oregon, say. Catch n Menrord or a Eugene man at a banquet or on a jleeplng car, at a funeral or at a wed dlng.'or anywhere, and barely men tionJust baroly whisper tho mime of 11a town, that's hia cue; he's off then, telling you how much It Increased in population In the last ten years and low much more It Is going to Increase Arcade Theatre REVIEW OF THE PARIS GARRISON" ..... G. CP. C. A splendid military picture. A POLISHED BUIiGLAlt'V . .... EHsauny A lively comedy. k WESTERN GIRL". . .Mellcs - A Btrong western story. MY BROTHER AGUOSTINO", Lubln Artistically deBlgned and with a lively comedy ending. TERMS OF THE WILL". Patlio "THE. HACK AD SCHlMIDT BOUT" ............. S. & A. A. successful burlesque com edy on a wrestling mutch. ....... LAl'HA fiREKX MILLS In Latest Popular Sontr. A Working Capital of Over $215,000 00 Inspires Confidence in This Bank The stability of this lnstl tutlon, , : The substantial men behind It, . V. Its roputiitton or progresslvcm'ss, , -' , ; It large loaning capacity, , Its spirt of Buoommodatton, have attracted customers whose deposits nggregnte over $700,- 000 00. .Promote your Interests by allying yourself as a depositor with this strong and successfu 1 Institution. . La Grande National Bank LA GRANDE, OREGON. CAPITAL ; . .' I 100.000.00 SURPLUS . . 115.000.00 RESOURCES , . 1,000,000.0a United States Depository LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 19lg. ' t .;. .. ' ..: . ..,:,. ' ,.:V.y ... , . -j--'-- --J"-" ' I ill I lY'jl' III 1 1 1 1 I ' I in the next ten. and bow many new mmmmmmmmmmwmm ' ' " , .. fnr.tnriPH have started ud and - how many new buildings have been built during 'the past six months, ana now. many new buildings have been puiii during the past six months, and bow many miles of new sidewalks .have been .built this fall, and how much , pavement has been laid; what line ll-, mate they have and what line fruit j they can raise. . He has all tne avail able figures right where he can put his fingers cm them. ... His pockets are loaded with statistics and, he hauls them out by the handful and sprin kles them oW'you like confetti at a carnival. f ' von mav begin to wish,, after an hnnr nr two: that he would change tlo subject and 'talk about Russian dan cers or the newest white hope or some nw thine: but. in any event you are impressed with the fact that the plie he comes from is quite boih u", nd that heaven, with a few modem Improvements, would be something like It only, of course, heaven has'nt anything like the fruit they raise and the climate they have He Is organ ized to booBt his town first, last ana jrfihe Hm.,-5Bea-k Bltta of him llvnayJawaVwltf it; but raise your .voice against bis town and iiVpiceodinKly behoove you to be good at one of two things-fightlne or rnnnli.g, ' ' m ffurd to the Roseourg pei we were speaking of a moment or two ago however. It Is different. He na all the sense of 'local pride that an angleworm has. Mention- to him the large ' and no aoum. grau' growth in Roseburg's population it- shown by the ' recent census, anu ov. Btlfllna a yawn, that figures nev er Interested him particularly: but it ( la true, then something ougnt to ne rtonn rleht away to keep theBe rubes' from swarming in and taking all the good snaps. Direct his attention to the figures of Roseburg's gross busi ness in a year and he remarks,' wear ily: "Yes, it has been a fair eeason tnr thn mnvlnar nlctrue shows." Com plain to him ot some crying municipal evil and ask him wnat hetninKs ougni n he done about It.' and he thinks probably you had better call a police man.- Aim a bltter Jeer. at .Rosemirg and he shows no heat whatsoeevn but hand him one little short-arm per; sonal Jolt Just one and you certaln" ly will get his goat pardon me, his Ibex. ' ' -' i j. There is no. necessity' for a person b'elne an Ibex.: even under the most adverse conditions. . For an example read the following: "Once there was a cyclone tfiat hit a town In Arkansas and turned it in side out. It wasn't one of those little one-ring cyclones that are here today and cone tomorrow. It was a three ring and. elevated stage cyclone, with himiodrome .track and a street pa rade three miles long, traveling with Its own private besom of dostruction It did all the things that one of those orthodox old-line ' southwestern cy Jmoo nntnrnllv WOUld do. It , WBE immediately nreceded by a swallow 'tailed bolt of lightning, which com- !'iintelv undressed a prominent citizen 1 hung his clothes, neatly pressed, over nmK nf nn ndlacent tree, una branded him'on the stomach with Wit iter TonninffA "Rrvan's. initials, and vnnsed into the earth with a loud roar lng sound and a smell like. somebody . 1 1 1 . 1 .First Wj - . ,11.. If viiii -".appearance, you win Demorcuiwiucuguicu niuiuwviv New Shipment of Spring styles in Tilt Shoes T frying ham, Then the main attraction, came along and proceeded to act up something scandalous. It blew Julep straws through the three-toot brlclt Bide of a distillery ;. It removed the paper from the walls and left the pic tures hanging there; It speared the hovel and Bmote the palace, and Jt fell iun that well-known Arkansas dem- ocrat who sVore never to ave untu, Samuel J. TIlden was president artd - .1 ti BU.HI, niliia .IT nun SIM ft muwou a.i -o - - - of his face, but left the rest of hts DOSCBge : , cumuuiunvcij MMvwm. And then It moved on to the. next stand., leaving that town iooK,..g tnougn 11 ougni , - dealt over again., - . ;,.-. "in the course of a hours editor of the leading home gaper - there was but one-dug jf from under several tons of plastering and laths and unpaid subscriptions and suchlike ; flotsam and Jetsam; and, after he had excavated a lone printer and a crippled press and a Btickful of type, and one thing andan; other, he got out an extra, giving the main details. As extras go',-this wasn't such an extra extra,: but . across the front page, in the biggest font of typw the editor could resurrect, ran the lines bo satisfying to local pride:;: "Hicksvllle Devastated by the Biggest Storm That Ever Hit a Town This Size.1 , ;i ', ' "Twelve Dead, and the Wind Blew ' Eight Miles an Hour Faster Here Than It Did In the St. Louis Cy '' clone."'; ": !i;:v ":'' ; ' J'- 'V ('Now that's the kind of an editor that lived in : Hicksvllle,' Arkanaaa. You can flnd them in' Koseburg or Eu-' gene or Medford or La Grande but he wouldn't have suited a mossbaek 1 mean an.lbex-not a minute. The appropriate for such nn affair to him would have been a headltua. reading something like this: . : "Blngvllle.JVIped Off the Map 12 Lives Lost 1 . f ;--:': "Fruit Trees' Uprooted and Orchards Ruined;' Crops ' Devastated; Hard Times Ahead." .. .. '. ;V;, . : The moral to this story Is obvious. An Illinois farmer shipping stock to Chicago, succeeded In crowding 130 large hogs into one car, and Is now open to offers from street railway companies, who would appreciate his services as a conductor. , To make telephone conversation more audible, a Danish banker has hit Spriiig" Showiini Designed and taUored especially for particular young men. In cludes the popular new shades of Blue, Tans and Plum Mixtures rtViil;! i want clothiniT that 1 upon vthe . expedient .of heating the upon i .transmitter '.' In thlB country the lan- guage usea rrequenny aoes inuu If you call" a grape fruit, would (t be right to Cauliflower fruitless? DICKEXS AJiMVERSARY TODAY .... ug hundred years -g0 t0. Dickens, the English . niiat -wni hnrn., . V.Ipkens is such a . n friend of so many La Grande perus ers of standard literature,, that it Is not am,8s to eivumerate some of the . lranortant. events In the author's life, I Here are Bome of the most Important. , . Dlcken8, career. , V ; m;JCIiarlel! JoUn Hu,fllara Dil;k. ens born at Portsea, near Portsmouth Dickens, a clerk at the son of John Dickens, a clerk at the. Portsmouth dockyard. ,' s ; 1816 Removed with his parents, to Chatham, where he resided until 1821 when the family removed to London. "1827 At the age of 15, with the ad vantage of, less thanvtllree years at school! he began life on his own ac count' as a clerk' ln: a 'solicitor's of fice. . ;' :" ,' . ; : ''' 1828-r-After a year. In the sol'c'tor'a office where he acquired tho intimate knowledge of law and lawyers that he afterward used to good advantage In his famous novels, young Dickens be came a law reporter. '' : lS31At the age of 19, he found em ployment as a parliamentary reporter. In which occupation he displayed great efficieucy. ': "' tl833 Wrote a slight sketch entitled "A Dinner at Poplar Walk," his (lrsf essay , In the realm of literature. 1836 At the age of 24, he publish-' edthe opening parts of "The Pick wick Papers," the. work which was to make h!m famous" v . Married Miss Catherine Hognrth, daughter of George Hogarth, publish er of the Evening Chronicle to which ,3wwa',w;i PRICES AND UP ' , ', is (out of the ordinary) in tailoring and STS .Dickens contributed, his first sketches r 1840 At the age of 28,' he had1 com- pleted "Oliver . Twist,". "Nicholas Nickleby," "The Old Curiosity Shop" and "Harnaby Rudge.'' y ; ? ; . 1841 Paid his first visit to America. '" 1843 At age of 31 he hid written. "Martin' Chuzzlewit", and the first of his Christmas books. :', , : 1 8471 At the age of 35, he had com pleted "Domeby and Son" and four more of his famous Christmas books. 1849 At the age of 37, he had com pleted "David Copperfleld," which is regarded by many critics as the great est of his works. . .. : 1863 At the age of 41,' he completed "Bleak House," which is famous for the exoellent construction of its"plot and has retained its place as one of Dickens' best efforts. ,; :;; : '' .1854 At the age of 42, he had com pleted "Hard Times.", ..'.;;, 1857 At the age of 45, he had com pleted. "Little Dorrit." : :l S ; 1859 At the age of 47. he had com pleted "A Tale of, Two Cities," and one; of the-most; powerful of his works.- ; " 1862 At "the age of 50, he completed Complete Equipment tor Resetting ann Repairing Rubber Buggy Tires LA GRADE IRON WORKS D. FITZGERALD, Proprietor , COMPLETE MACHINE SHOPS AND FOUNDRY HACK AND AMBULANCE After a Cold Auto Ride j what could be more comforting or exhllerating than a nice cup of Hot Chocolate, which you will always find ready at this Beason of i thu year at our Soda counter7 We give It to you pure and cheering, , full of that goodness and nutriment so peculiar to the best quality of Chocolate. It Is a food, drink and medicine all combined, at low i cost ." i-'.iv. :.'OV.;i, r, J 1 J Sejder's - La Grande; ; .,il.(jri!K'. hU ;;!!: 1": ri'A. New Styles in . Gordon $3.00 Hats 5 'Great Expectations." one of the most cbaracterlsUcaily' 'humorcrtid .'of,'"ihl811'' works. . 1866 At the age of 54, he completed "Our Mutual Friend." :' 1867 At the age of 55, he arrived in. . America to begin a lecture tour in which he appeared in mnny prin cipal cities and was. received every- where with the greatest cordiality and enthusiasm. -1868 At the age of 66, he returned . to England in failing health, having depleted his strength by hard work and the excitement .Incident to hts American tour. S 1869 At the age of 67, he began writing "The Mystery of Edwiu Drood which he did not live to complete. 1870 At the age of 68, on the eve ning of ! June 9, the ' great-writer : , breathed his last at "Gad's Hill Place" his home In Kent not far from Roches ter, which he had purchased In 1856. ' . 1870 On June 14, the remains were v laid to rest in Westminster abbey. In accordance with Dickens' own often- expressed , feelings in the matter,: the . funeral was strictly -private.. . I Uptown office Main 720 Residence phone Main . 25 . t. BUSSEY Wi-v rt'jL h-it