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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (May 25, 1912)
LA QRAXDE E VEM N'O .OHvtRRVKf? RATUlvDAY, MAT" 21, 1012.-" CHERRY SHOW ANNUAL WOKLD'S BLUE BIBBON WINNERS FOUND THESE ; Just to Show the Beat Is Core' : Slogan in uua mum Nestled on the, eastern side of the vaiiev is Cove, a garden spot to be ure. Each year the Cove people give a Cherry show which Is probably different from any other entertain ment in the state. '. No one pays a cent to enter.'no one Is asked to pay. Everything Is free and.lt Is one ot the grandest gatherlnfls to be wltues- DOU, 't ' A high moral tone prevails at Cove, The cherry ahow carries out that mo- al Idea In every detail. No rowdy Ism,' no polsterousness. it is a clean, wholesome gathering ot neghbors and trends who go thee to meet each other, renew acquantances and pass judgment on the cherry crop which Is always displayed In excellent style. Cove Is a prize winner on cherries at St Louts Cove, Oregon tooK tne grand prize at the World's fair con test. Again at the Lewis'' & Clark fair In Portland the Cove cherry met all comers and claimed the honors. At Seattle there was a repetition of former events and Cove came out victorious. And a slight prediction Is here made that at the Panama' fair Cove people will add another loving cup to their large collection of tro . , phles for raising the best cherries In 41 the world. These prizes mean something. One might fall to Cova on an nor bat where a community repeatedly takes honors In every ahow It enters there Is positive assurance, that the cherries there are really the best In the world. Guheston Causeway Completed Galveston, Texas,, May 25. The Galveston Causway, said to be the greatest engineering achievement of Us kind In America, was formally ded Icated and opened to traffic today. The opening was made the occaclou tor a public celebration In which del egations from many Texas cities par tlpicated. . The compeletton ot the causeway marks the culmination of the exten sive Improvements projected by the city of Galveston after the dlaaster ous storm and flood which laid a large part of the city In ruins In 1900. The causeway connects Galveston La land and the mainland. The structure Is 10,642 feet long, including 2,472 reet ot reinforced concrete arch bridge work ; a 100-foot lift bridge, 4,530 feet of causeway on the Island and 3,640 feet on the mainland. The structure la 66" feet wide and provides for railroad and interurban . tracks and roadways for; vehicles and foot passengers. There are twenty-eight arches In the bridge, in four series of seven arches each. . The causeway nas Been three years in building and cost i,suu,uuu. BIch Prize in Musical Contest ParisMay 25. The International Congress of Music, which 'will hold forth here during the thre? days be ginning tomorrow, has attracted an army of musicians to the French cap. Ital.. They have come In unusually large numbers from all parts of Eu rope, the special magnet of attraction being the' $100,000 prize offering in the international musical contests which will be the feature of the con gress. The contests will embrace both vocal and Instrumental music. So numerous are the entries that the committee In charge has been obliged to secure a dozen large halls In which to hold the competitions. Topsy Harfsel Is making good as manager of the Toledo team and is keeping the mud hens well up in the American Association race. ' "' ' . "" . " ) ... ".. ." "."II1'')'-' ' i ' ."... .,'"' .M1.. I . i i .ml '' ....,; fcv.-;....v.,t:1:.:,ii ,- ,;..') ,-:.y v -f ,..'...'K., j.fr"v- '.' r : ;.:-:. :, V-.;A V . '' ' 1 '' .''':' ' '.'v. .;'.. i. -i ' ;:'-. "J4-1J ! I ' f..t 1 ' S ' , ' , ' . . , 1 ,j ,, ' - '- - . ' , 1 ' ' ' , ,' '' '4. ?'1" SV..MAt' "'JT' ) ' S. r f. v ' ' . ' VIEW OF A PORTION OF IA GRANDE Niagara Delight : : unusual manifestations of friendship ; The delegation which brought , to on both aIde.':::'.v:'.;''..;':'.'';;:',;; this country the bust "La France" by v The visitors were favored wih a Rodin, a gift from. the French republic perfect spring day atNiagara Falls, to the United States on the occasion and spent most of the time; out of ot the Champlaln tercentenary, spent doors as the guests ot General Francis May 8, its last day before sailing for v.Qreene and Mr. Phillip P. Barton. home at Niagara Falls. The visit of By means ot automobiles and a prl- trolley car, points of interest the delegation to this majestic natural rate spectacle was a fitting conclusion, to ( about the Falls were visited, as well the trip the culmination ; of "two as the various American and Canadian weeks of entertainment ' notable - for plants where electric energy Is gener. JLaGraiid La Grande is the commercial center of a very large, v ery rich, and rapidly developing section of country. La Grande, during the past ten years, has had a greater growth than any other city in Eastern Oregon. La Grande's prospect for the coming ten years are far better than tbey' weire f or the past ten years. 1 V An investment in La Grande real estate is as safe as money deposited in the Bank of England, and will pay greater returns ten times over. , ; ,t t ' We are the sole controllers of the property lying bet ween the business center of La Grande, the great Palm er mills, and the railroad shops, a section of the city which is rapidly building up, and in which values are rap idly advancing. ' , ' An investment now will return to you a profit of 100 per cent in five years. Write us and let us give you full particulars. . . Wm. Miller &Bro. 1107 Adams Ave. PROUDUCT ICE A I THE VALLEY ated to the amount of nearly 406,000 horse power. Mr. Hanotaux, chair-. man of the delegation, member of the French Academjr and a'former Minis ter ot Foreign Affairs, showed much interest in the electrical development, expressing his pleasure that It had been attained without injury to the scenio beanty of the cataract, and that . 1 a treaty had recently been arranged IN ADDITION TO GROWING FRUIT between the United States and Canadj o : ICE 18 MADE fixing the amount of water diversion' : - within safe limits for the future. , Mr. Blerlot, the first man to cross North Powder Ice Plant One ; ol tt the English Channel In an aeroplane, ' ' "We"" ln "e8 ' was also fascinated with the mechan-, - -J leal installations by which, smokeless, North Powder, with her many other noiseless power. Is furnished withtln resources and achievements has one: a radius ot 200 miles atbot mifflXVM cost ot that produced by steam. ' w R & N raiiroaa. It Is her natural ' The visitors were nentertained at ice - Each year ft large crop 'if fln' luncheon at tne Prospect House. GenV ."ural Ice Is put up, and It became Green, on behalf of the hosts, pro- a f0 th sh!ppln8; Indui'trr . . . , . that the Pacific Fruit company has nnflAn o tnnnt rn PrnnnA nnmlncr nnl ... ... . . . . , v . " o - mteiy anaea a large ice nouse wnera as the mother of civilization. Mr. al east bound trains carrying refrlg- Hanotaux, responding for the delega- erator cars are Iced for long runs. tlon, said, with typical French cour-' tNrtlluPo!"lerl has , m,any 0thn ' - . , things besides ice including a well tesy, that when he had come to Nlag- tarmed C0Untry that produces re- ara Falls to see the Seventh Wonder markable hay and grain. Live stock of the World and had" discovered in is a big asset and lumbering Is not his hosts an eighth. C a small Item by any means. ; I GRANDE LA GROCERY COMPANY (Incorporated) Wholesale Grocers . ; . '' . H 0 . . '..'......: Distributors of Preferred Stock Canned Goods i Farm Sanitation Disease germs thrive in the filth of dark, damp places. ' Sanitary sur roundings must therefore be clean, well-lighted and dry. Such surround ings tend not only to prevent the apread of disease, but also aid great ly in recovery from disease when once contracted.- . " : Lime is used for many purposes on disinfectants, and Is very useful when applied as white wash for the disin fection' and sweetening of cellars, privies, barns, stables, poultry houses,; 0f old age and other buildings. Unless it can be years old kept from the air, lime wash should be made up fresh before using. Air slacked lime is of no value as a" disinfectant. apart, and at harvest he threshed out 67 bushels. . The next year the yield was seventy-two bushels, using a lit tle more seed., On a trial row he planted seventyslx extra fine kernels of seed (weighing 45 grains),, and the product was 10 pounds or at theate of 100 bushels per acre. ; Life of the Grapevine. : mUn i. . .1 . . a the lite of a grapevine Is longer than , the life of the oak. It Is rare that a. wild grapevine Is found that has died Pliny mentions a vine 600 There is a vine In Hamp ton Court, England, planted In 1769, while here ln America, there Is a wild grapvine on the shores of Mobile Bay, . with tn a mile of Daphne,' Ala., com- , monjy known as the General Jack son vine, more than 6 feet,in circum ference at Its base. There is a grape- I v Good Seed Essential . " The Importance of good seed can not be too stronly urged. In Belgium Vne jn carpentorla, Cul-i under which all seeds are carefully hand-picked more than 800 persons may stand. Its and the wheat crop cultivated,1 with trunk Is 8 feet lndlameter at the base, the result that from sixty to seventy ' and It has borne as high as ten tons bushels of wheat per acre is produced of fruit. ; It Is said that this vine was on nearly all farms. Prof, Blout In planted ln 1842. several years' experiments In Color- ado, found that It paid well to hand- ' g0me of the Eastern scribes are pick his seed wheat. ' The first year panning'Ttie White Sox for what they he planted 7 pounds ot hand-picked term "scrapping on the field," but It . . . - . generally the "scrappy team' that wheat on an acre in rows, 18 Inches brlngB h'ome tEe baco PHONE in ,m mmm u . i mm m iiffimnw Firm MAm 720 lJi tm n aissrfwysw ym J"' . mmmm: Cni'ltT HOUSE OF' UNION COUNT!