PIC37T70
JLA GRANDE EVENING OBSEVR,
N2W .
Spring
Shoes'
' All the new styles in suedes, buck, tan, patents, gun
metals and kids in widths from AA to 1L.
Coint where you can be Properly Fitted.
Men's spring shoes in an endless assortment of
styles to suit your fancy in Johnston & Murphy,
Howard & Foster, Bostonians, etc., carried in all
vidths.
P"8nLEY THEME
PEJfDJLKTOS AHXrEKCE BEAXS
v ' , : ADDRESS.
WJtk Flowery OretJoa he Sets Forth
HI Principles. .
Pendleton, March 5. -(Special)
Though but ISO people bad . gathered
to hear him. and taany of these were
high gcbool studenta. Dr. Haryey W.
Wiley, national champion of pure
food spoke for almost two hours als
evening In the auditorium of the high
school on the - subject', nearest bis
heart and be told toe audience a few
truth, which will maktaem careful, ,ng ftfem be e,8enUa, M pure food
or wnal ana now wey . ei npreauer.
house wu made of adulterated leath
er which Is the reason that It takes
two or three pairs of shoes now
where twenty years ago one pair suf
ficed. Ha scored the holders of great
wealth, branding them as robbers of
the poor. .
The speaker devoted but little time
to; hi, own ' experience whlle chief
chemist of the department' of i agri
culture.' He referred . to 4 bis light
against the use of bensoate of soda
in food products fit which fight he
was so hampered by his superiors
that he finally resigned In . disgust
He declared in this connection that
so great was 'the pressure brought to
bear upon his superiors by the cor
poral kins that he was forbidden to
speak or write the name of benzoate
of soda. ' - V ,
Good Cooks Seeded.
In conclusion, the speaker empha
sized the need of good cooks,, declar-
YOURS TO PLEASE
1. J. French Shoe Co.
AGENT FOR ONYX HOSIERY.
A Strong Endorsement,
t
W. H. Holmes of the Decorah, la.,
Journal says, "I have been a sufferer
from plies and hemmorholds for
years. I got no relief until my drug
gist recommended Meritol File Rem
edy. . Before I had taken half the
package the distress was gone and I
bave had no troubl eslnce. I would
not take a thousand dollars and bs
back In my former condition."
Newlin Drug Co., exclusive agents.
; .-- :
" A Message to Railroad Hea.
B. 8. Bacon, 11 Bast 8t Bath. Me.,
sends out this faming to railroaders
- everywhere. "My work as. conductor
caused a chronic Inflammation of the
kidneys and I was miserable and all
played out. From the day I began
I IUA1IIS rule rauuc 11.0 .
I 1o regain my strength, and I am bet
ter now than I have been for twenty
years." Try them. Sold by A. T.
Hill.
Late Soeg. ,
Just off the press y '. Eunice . W.
Proctor: "Oloom'si Fsacles," "a ro
mantic twilight scene. Bale by H.
KIrktis Dugdale Co, Washington, D
C. 15 cents postpaid. '' J-4-St
GARDEN SEEDS
A full line of first class garden seeds- on display. ,
Now is the time to buy as our line is complete.
FANCY APPLES
The best kind for both cooking and eating, box 75c
OUR HOME-MADE SAUERKRAUT IS SPLEN
DID ' '
I have some more of the 3 K. Norway Herring and
also some stock fish on hand yet. It is all very fine
stuff. . -
THE (300D THINGS COST NO MORE THAN ORDINARY
THINGS IF YOU KNOW WHERE TO BUT.- ' '
Stageberg Grocery
PHONE MAIN 70
TEGETAMLE8 IN SEASON ALL THI VtHK.
D. R. FONG
if: :--': "..'0 v!-: -
'y '' '
( f''2:' f :"
n V'-N i.. J :
MEDICINE C.
tmucu ui t)or Cuy Uuice
CHINESE HERBS AND
ROOT REMEDIES
Our wonderful life giving
herbs will absolutely extirpate
every Impurity from the system.
No drugs, no poison, non-alcoholic.
HUE-CONFIDENTIAL
CONSULTATION FREE"
Those living out ot town can
cure themselves at home with
our herbs. Write to ns tor par
tlrulars. Office Hours: t to 11 a. m.; 1 to
p. m.
Sundays 9 to 11 a. m.; 1 to
i p. m.
Telephone Bala 762.
Office t .HIS Adams Avnnne
LA GRANDE, OREGON.
Dr. Wiley is not an - orator and he
made no attempt at eloquence'- last
evening, but be had 'a message to de
liver and the importance and serious
ness of the message made oratorical
decorating unnecessary. ' .
Assuming that every man. woman
and child desires to live and that life
Is the greatest of all wealth, the ilis
tlnguisehd speaker went on to show
that that which we value most we
safeguard and treasure least. "We
all have the desire to live," he said
"but we do not act In accordance with
this desire. We have the wishbone
but not the backbone." : -
In this connection he recited the
acts of state legislatures in . appro
priating thousands upon thousands
of dollars for needless projects and
at the same time making but scant
provision for the preservation of hu
man life. New York state, he declar
ed, appropriated at one time ..$100,-
000,000 for the widening and deepen
ing of the Erie canal and even that
amount has been spent without ac
complishing much save the enrich
ment of a few. contactors. With
half that amount, he declared, be
could eradicate tuberculosis In the
same state. The state of Utah ( Just
the other. day appropriated $35,000
for the protection of sheep ' from
disease, he said, and gave the ' state
board of health $10,000 with which to
protect man from disease. "A sheep
Is., therefore, worth three and a half
times, as much as a man in Utah", he
said.
'. Tribute to Wilson.
Congress has absolutely ignored
(he need of health , protective meas
ures and appropriations, whlje no
president from the time of Washing
ton to the time of Taft has ever so
much as mentioned the public health
In his inaugural address or message
to Congress, he averred. However,
he expressed his hope and belief tha'
Woodrow Wilson would shatter this
precedent because in all of his pub
lic addresses he has always dwelt up
on the necessity of safeguarding the
health of the nation's inhabitants,
Half of Children Starving.
Warming up to bis subject, the
speaker declared that one of the s'nf
of the country la its Ignorance of the
science of nutrition. Medical col
. .... ... A
leges ne included in nls criticism for
neglecting this Important branch, de
claring that In All the time he stud
led medicine he was never told one
word a boit the value of nutrition's
a preserver of health and a phophy
lactic of disease. "I undertake to
say", he stated, "that right now half
of the children In the United States
are starving, some because of Insuffi
cient food, and the others from im
proper food." N
. In this connection he 'dealt death
blow to the popular Idea that babies
to be healthy must be fnt. "It Is the
lVur:U tu.li ui, cat it. iui a uaujr' iu Of
rolling in fat." he declared, "and ye
It Is every fond mother's desire to
have her Infant so." Ignorance com
bined with mother love make a com
bination that is fatal to thousands o'
panics, he stated. Because of their
love for Ihelr ' offspring they feed
them sweet s'uffs that are polsonon
io the delicate svstenis of the llttlr
ones. "Death collects Its taxes upon
infancy In the months of July and
August", he said, "and In those two
nmn'hs there are a thousand bahiee
dying In the United States every i,iv
because their parents know noth'nji
of the science of nutrition."
Shoe Leather Adulterated.
Or. Wiley delivered a scathing de
nunciation of the adulterating cor
porations whom he has been flght'n
for ears. Incidentally he remarked
that 'very sole of every shoe In the
A good cook need never fear losing
ber husband, he declared, and he ex
pressed tbe belief that ' the. divorce
evil would be greatly lessened . if
mothers would Instruct their daught
ers more in the culinary and less In
musical and social accomplishments.
Dr. Wiley was introduced by Dr.
T. M.. Henderson, secretary of the
Umatilla County Medical association,
who paid the visiting physician a
splendid tribute,' Incidentally, he
told the audience of how the medical
society hud .backed up Dr.' Wiley In
his fight for pure food.
.iiirt dim t westtuiuster and then at
Whitehall after be bad taken tbe lat.
ter lm from Wolsey It was not
ujitll WOT. when Whitehall was de
stroyed by Are. that St James1 pal
ace became the tendon resldeuc of
monarch. London Stsndard.
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1913.
CHILDREN WHO ARE SIMLT
L"Z.T JiZ .lu. Ulr oo comfort Mat
. L..i nan nmlufl no lam
, iTlt. UJaMUd, U Hot,"- '
An Odd Lsgsoy.
Thomas Jefferson, the founder of tht
Jefferson fsmUy of actors, was remem
bered curiously io tbe will of Weston,
wbo was himself an esteemed member
of Garrick's company. .Weston's will
contained this Hem: '
"I nave piayea onaer m "- m r T
ment of Mr. Jefferson at Richmond and TjieyJuilCC JIIq
iveelred from him everv Dollteness. I
'f ront ,
therefore leave him all my stock or
prddence. It being the only good qual
ity I think be stands in need of."
, Wellington and Waterloo.
Heine, in speaking of Wellington's
good luck at Waterloo, says: vThls
man has the bad fortune to meet with
good fortune when the greatest man of
the world Is unfortunate We see in
blm the victory of stupidity over genius
-Arthur Wellington triumphant when
NaHleon Houupurte was overwhelmed.
Wellington and Napoleon! It Is a won
derful phenomenon that tbe bnman
mind can ut the same time think of
both these names"
Good Excuse.
"Why do you keep me waiting on
this corner two hours?" demanded the
Irate husband "You said you were
merely going to step in to see how
Mrs. Uahhle was."
"Well, she insisted on telling me."
""'"hlncton Herald
Prant lacing is not the only
requirement of a perfect cor
set .
The popularity of tbe Gos
snrd Front Lacing corsels has
been followed by a number of
imitators. Other than lacing In
front all these Imitations are
totally .lacking In the essentials
which make Gossard corsoU so
ertrcmely desirable.
Every woman who investi
gates buys a Gossard corset .
A complete line of all mad
els and sizes always on hand.
Prices $3.50, $5.06, $.5 d
$8.50.
j Mrs.TRobt. Pattison j
! l'hone Red 8221 CORSETXEBE
Bes. 1702 Spriug and Oak J
THE MAKING OF WORDS.
Curious Origin of 8eme of Our Most
Common Expressions.
In tbe "Romauce of Words." pub
lication by n English author, much
8pv?e Is devoted to "aphesis." which
me.iins a gradual or unintentional loss
sf an unaccented vowel at thq begin
ning of a word.Thls kind of word
shrinkage Is mors common than one
might suppose, y
Sometimes the middle syllable of a
word will be slurred to the point of'
extinction. From Mary Magdalene,
tearful and penitent, comes the word
maudlin. Sacrlstnn is contracted Into
sexton; tbe old French word paralysis
becomes palsy; bydroplsku becomes
dropsy, and tbe word procurator be
comes proctor in English.' . Bethlehem
Hospital For Lunatics, established In
London, came to be telescoped into
bedlam, mtlch as Cbolmondeley came
to be Cllnmley , and Majorlbunks
MnrsulmnUs , .I'eel Is for appeal, meud
for amend.' lone for , alone. , fender,
whether before a fireplace or outside a
ship. Is for defender; fence for defense,
tuint for attaint ' v '
The word peach, commonly regarded
) KiiIIhIi thief slang, goes back to
the time of Shakespeare and is relat
ed to Impeach, though used to indicate
informing against an accomplice. The
word cad Is for Scotch caddie, once on
errnnil boy. now familiar In connection
with golf. Caddie is from the French
word cadet, meaning a Junior or young
er brother. imlinnupolis News.
LIGHT
i
. What you should be interested in
) is, not how little you can pay for
; light but how to get the best
.: light for your money.
"Electricity puts this licht with
in your- means and'gives you the
best light, regardless of cost.
You get greater volume of light,
plus safety, convenience, cleanli
ness and healthfulness. Any one
of these.qualities should be an in
ducement for you to insist on
electric light. ,
SUHGERY ON THE SKULL.
The Operation of Trepanning
Common In Ancient Times..
While the medic:; I pro'esslon l
'(treed that some nmrrh form of nur
sery must have existed fro::i very an'
lent lleies. It h is nlways heenji mat
er of wonder tint ho otmplex and lc!i
ate tin 'petition us trepanning should
ilso he one of the oldet
There N authentic record or this op
'ration (latin back to the tine of flip
"i-m:e. win wrote treatises on frac
u res. dislocations niid wounds of tin
end. wherein be de rlted the methoi'
f procedure to be followed In the ens
f a fractured skull. His Idea was ti
ut away a piece of bone so that th
ressiireoii the bmin might be relieved
The imnaN of this em uNo show tin:
l tile was used for this puriose. which
it a time when modern anaesthetic
-vere unknown, must have been, to miw
he leoMt. painful. .
According to Holmes, the operntlo:
tf removing nle-s of hnne arns im-
ormeu long before historic times Th
ITwts on the skull are easily ween uTie
leatu and are visible as long ns t':
wines are preserved. From inspeetio:
f certain skulls of the later stone ui'
u ancient Krltaln there has Ik-oii il
Ived the conclusion that sonie.of Hum
lad undergone the operation, whl !
uust have been performeif with a xtoii.
tnplenient. Harper's Weekly
Eastern Oregon Light & Power Co.
"Always at your service."
WE HANDLE
EVERYTHING
ELECTRICAL
I Waitc Electric Co. !
Origin st St. James' Palace.
Jlenry VIII when he built St. Jamrx'
luilace leslunel It for a country resl
(lein-e to take the place of the manor
if IunliiKtoii. where be had been In
the habit of going for a chance of air
He pull.il down the hospital dedicated
to St. James the Less and on Its slto.
as llollusheil tells us. "built a koimIIv
manor niul mmle a falre parke for his
greater ci.inoditie and pleasure." The
palace stood iu the midst of fields well
stocked with game, and tbes were
Inclosed as its private demesne. T.ven
while residing here Ucnrj peU hl
Hew i-oiey building
Ktione m iyy
When You Are Plan
" ning to Build
emember that our sNngles. sash
es, doors, flooring ad other lum
ber are recognized in this com
munity as thoronghly trustworthy
and high grade, and that we do not
make a practice of tver-charging.
We bought our present stock whea
lumber was lower in price.
WENAHA LUMBER COMPANX j