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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1913)
..Jt. 4 .. . - I TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1913. LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, PXGEFOUB : i THE OBSERVER B PUCE DEN NiS ' EDITOR AND OWNEH. . lite red at the postofiie t t firando, Oregon, m second class matter. STJBJjCBlPTIOJJ BITES. aflr, alegie opf ally, pe free .....K Mir. par aiaatb M But. any way, after what eeemed the longest time to us we were at u.r roH from that trlson:- (my, how cold It wuN and we found ourselves In a stream of water that -was run nina from the lower end of a canyon I was ap glad that I organized a glee rlub among us and we sang ana danced and Jumped and snJaahed and romped till we got away flown to where the water was clean enough to wash ourselves In; for, oh, how dirty we were! . Two or three times. the sun came down at me just as I was getting n.rm nn a blade of Krass that was i growing near the edge of the stream I, , v.-J vJ I rlHInir hill My origin may oa no queerer than 4 friend Jumped and caught me away that of any one of my many affinities, from 1m and off we went n our or acquaintance I say acquaintance nogT frollc till we came to one of the es, for I And out that almost every-fBilnw. i eVer saw: they told me his name was Pool: and he Ov YouPay ' ATOM OF VAPOR. t A Biography. J. D. Oilman. ' I soberest fellows I ever fhlnv otvmi 1 iha tthrilA onrth lovps ... L. .n. me, seeks nie and) Is so Insistent upon my very heart-life that It dies unless I agree to-Jojn it. yet eo far as that la concerned 'it Is only one of the many, many mysterious things hard for so brainless an atom as myself to comprehend. In fact ;I mm so slow to learn, I seem to have been very old before I remembered anything. I was gray with age or something else when knowledge first became mine; and I was high up In the sky herding with millions and millions of others ao like myself, I am sure none but our mothers could have told us apart. There were Indeed clouds and clouds of us. Tt was a summer day, such as they have In that country, end as I now recall It, we bad risen from the earth somewhere In Tibet: I think It was Tibet, for although I have been In that country about ten million times since then, I never saw the exact spot agalp; and ' we were rolling and tumbling about and Jost ling each other In 'all klnda of Jolly style, first on the back of one gust of wind and then another, when we saw at a Immense distance from us a J)lg bunch of hunches Just like our selves. They got caught in the arms of the winds and were rushed toward us and we toward them till we were black 1n the face. We wiggled and twisted and squirmed till we became ao hot the blazes began to . fly in every direction. We were Just so mad we lost pur way and the very first thing fce knew we had gotten to the border of. the upper air close to the aarthless'land where Jack Frost Is king, and he captured the whole lot of us and squeezed Va In his froz en fists till we were the most beauti ful slx-slrie'd -crystals you or anyone else ever saw. ' Then King Jack gave us a puff with a breath so icy we all were glad to scamper off in any road to get away from him; he -blew us over the Chang-la-Pod-la. or main watershed of the Himalayas and dropped us into one of the deepest, coldest canyons Imaginable.! We had not been ' long there In his Ice-prison when he sent a lot of others who just Jumped on us and tramped us all out of shape and tied us tight In the arms of a hard hearted old glacier whore we stayed, oh. I suppose about a thousand years, I do not reully know, for the sun ahone so little up there that we could not keep track of the months, let alone years; for It is winter there even In summer time. frowned at us and told us to keep tllt. w did not like that, so we nnletlv edited around his lonesome old house till we saw a chance to slip out with some Dsn that were go liiar that wav. Once In a while we i i - stopped to leap up In the spray and play In the' colore of some of the many rainbows that play In beautiful silence In the far-away nooks of the unlhablted world. This was the river Brahma-put ra that gets bigger and wider all through Its distance of 1500 miles down to the hot Indian ocean As we reached lower levels we saw more and more evidences of warmer lands, and many gauzy-winged flies dipped down among us very often. Watching my chance, I leaped out of the current Just aa one of those fine fellows made a dash at us and I lighted on his wings; he did not seem to notice me at all, but, horrors! a few minutes afterwards a trout jumped for him when he came too near the water and grabbed him and me and down he went. I was not long In finding out what to do, for when the . fish opened his gills in breathing, out 1 j scampered.'- I wanted no more ex perience like that For daya and weeks, I guess, we went on, on, on, down through the weirdest, wildest canyons, over mighty falls, through underground passages where no human being has yet ever been, and into India and then out to the great salty ocean. We had no sooner reached that great world of water than a typhoon came alotig and picked up. hundreds of millions of us at one 'whirl' and car ried me (and I suppose the others of us, although I became separated rrom the rest of our crowd) away up In the air toward the high mountains of the upper Ganges. In a thunderstorm I went back to the soil and seeped through among the roots of some bamboos reaching the nasty Ganges. That is one of the trips I never care to mention to my friends. It was not so bad then as now since so many, people live there for the river Is now worshipped as a god and the millions who -Infest Its shores are Indescrib able in their filth. I have had some experiences that the mere thinking of would make me grayer than I am if that were possi ble. They were worse than ( that ad venture with the trout np In the Hlm a)aas. 1 will tell you one: this one is a real scare. - It waa ao long ago I cannot even count back. After- traveling- around the "world In clouds that are visible and In vap or Invisible, and having been Up and down the earth In sea-currents and driven by waves, and having aeen al most all the land by means of their creeks and rivers, I got an exper ience in, Egypt that I really thought waa golag to be the end of me. In fact I waa gone so long, and bad such a hard time getting free, the world did not look at all as I remember it. .. ... The Test of Time Time determines whether the policies ander which a bank is oser ated are safe. This bank has bee" la busiaess tweety-arx year. It has grown buu.o i...... .. .. . .. . ' ' . .. ,.u ,. .,,. most prosperous fftanctai Institutions tn the WMit. The soundness of its policies le attested by the long list of conserv ative bustaoaa men who traasMet their bualixws here; also by an earned surplus f JUO.tt.tf.M, ta work or ttme asd the result of conservative management. This bank baa facllTtaj lor taking care of more htgh sjrade busi ness and offer tta services to those who appreciate the best In banking. La Grande National Bank La Grande, Oregon Capital, flOOsW.M Barplas, tna.m. Rraouaae, DESIGNATED DBWSITOBT Of TJNTTEB 9TATB9 OTEWTSTKfST. TJTfTTSP STATES WSTAL SlTIWCS I waa somewhere under !he equator near the coast of Africa and a zephyr caught me and lifted me Into one of those invisible aeroplanes that have been running ever since creation and I was driven by an air-chauffeur ovetl the blazing sands of Sahara desert ' past lake Tchad up Into the heights 9fn KlIama-NJaro. So aoon as I could do so, I slipped down that old mountain's back and got over Into the head waters of the Nile. After a long time of it I finally reached tow er Egypt and was quietly resting after the tiresome Journey, when most unexpectedly I was dipped up In vessel carried by a slave attached to the mortuary chamber of the chief of embalmers to ' the king's house hold. As we approached the place. few of the knowing ones jumped out, but I did not so escape. One of the greatest Pharaohs was dead and bis coffin, called a sarconhaeus. which he had kept on hand for a long time, naa to be cleansed and rean nointed for hie funeral. I was used In assisting In this process, but I was continually fearsome that I might be left In that regal coffin ; so, when the opportunity came, I clung to the hand of the servant who washed the casket and was watching for an occasion to escape on the back of some air-cur rent that might slip In; but everyone that came avoided me. When they picked up the body to lay It In the great stone box, In some manner I slipped off his hand and became en tangled in some of the wrapping of the corpse, and before I could disen gage, myself I beard the stone lid scrape Into place, and a sudden chill seized me. . How long I lay In that darkness I never could find out: for they took that huge stone, coffin to one of the gigantic pyramids and after climbing down the longest, darkest, winding- est stairways you ever and never heard of, they, placed It in a place railed -a fcrypt " and , sealed all the doors leading to it and there were many of tbem.'too. Poor me! As I said. I never knew how long I stayed there. The first I recall was that some dry air of the Sahara came In and became busy awaking us all and driving ua out: it made threats about extermination and -annihilation and spme other swear words which I nev er did understand, but. must be some; thing dreadful. So. after a time, so long I could not see back to the be ginning of it, I began to work and twist my way in some direction, but I cpuld not Bee, and knew not which was the way out. So the first thing I knew I was through the wrapping and next to the clammy body of the old monarch. Ugh, but that was ghostly! After a little, a few years maybe, I reached the side of the sar cophagus and wormed my way through It to the wall of the pyramid. Ages went by. How many of those granite layers I pierced 1 11 never know. , ' ( When I finally emerged there was a zephyr waiting for me and 1 joyously Mow Much Do ; for Your Clothes? No matter how much or how little you pay you should see .that .you jet ;all the .value possible you are entitled to it. j j Our Clothing Department Offers Batter Values Highest quality of materials, finest tailoring and very latest styles all jiacked bv our binding guarantee of perfect satisfaction, whether you buy a $15.00 suit or a $35.00 suit. ' , - : ' Were Sole La -Grande Agents for i ... . . - , , Fidelity $15.00 Suits ' : Society Brand Suits $20.00 'to $30.00 'A, Alfred Benjamin Suits $20.00 to $3S.OO Hirsch-Wickwire Suits $25.00 to $35.00 The choice of America's best men's furnishings on display in our men's department. l aniln(Toh. GORDON $3.00 HATS MANHATTAN SHIRTS $1.50to$2.5ff EAGLE BRAND CAPS 50c to $1.50 STETSON $4.00 HATS INTERWOVEN HOSIERY 25c to 50c. . J. E. TILT DRESS SHOES $4.00to$5.50 The Fownes Cloves for both women and men. Prices $1.60 and 'up. The Quality Store Alteration Dep't. In charge of an expert fitter and is giving perfect satis faction. v. . 19 Jumpfd Into his arms and he carried me lightly till I came to talk to you. But, It seems to me .1 can smell i that old mummy yet Can't you? 'AGE SO BAR.' i Everybody in La, Grande Is Eligible. 1 70TH M H V a A Lesson in Geography Teacher-4 Where isCorkr (immy(ptMtwff)--"That't easy, n the center of the Spalding Official National League Ball." Thfct liltU pfr of cork hat n?v. otutiumavd th tram. Batten In , th to kwffUM wno eoukln't com within 10 points of thmfi "300 arvatUininc thatHtinr(Hm.whU lh Weimar oi ts nrm prvtrresainff proporttonatrly. Tha Cork Otntar has solvTCi th effort to rt mora ' bat tin without rnakihjr a fare of tha tram. Tha fart tnat th bit; leas-tiea ua tha Cuk Canto ball xdutirvtv proves that it ts tha km aoutrht for ha la oca bvtwean pitching and battiaa;. A. a SPALDING & BROS. 156 Gmu7 StrMt, San Frmndtco A ! ynar twrml d W for StwMInc r talon. 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' Oxy-Acetylene .Welding Plant For Welding Broken Castings of Every Description Cast Iron, Steel and Aluminum Welding, Crank Cases. Cylinders, or any part of machinery repairetj. ' No order too large or too small for oiu- attention. This special work is handled by expert workmen. Best equipped custom shops between Portland and Salt Lake. f J- A. Gyllcnberg, Machinists and Founders BAKER, OREGON TELEPHONE 403 Lll, (V1U Parlor. Everything fresh, neat and up-to-date. Open morning at 9 . m. Cor V'.atn an Fir. Phone Red lOli 2-Jl-tt rian Tnnlm Expert work guar anteed. Cbas. Burger. P. O. Box 168. 8-18-tf G. H. Armstrong, pianoforte, pip organ.' ear training, theory and his tory of mush? carefully taught 604 Adams ave phone alaok 1341 DressRiakra. Mrs. Rev. Adams 1302 H O arena. Pte Blk Ml. The Northwestern National of Min neapolls is a Western Company for Wester people, with Lower Pre nlums and Modern up-to-date Super or Policy Contracts, a purely Moiual Old Line Legal Beserye Life Insur nce Company; Do aa .your neighbors are doing, j - - w.u lu.cotiniB kVT rourself. and you will find that you :an save a good round sum of money by placing your Insurance In the above Company. Any inquiries, through correspond ence will receive our Immediate at tention. If you will mall us your card stating your rk (nearest birthday) snd the kind of policy yoii desire, lit erature descriptive of the above Com pany's policies will be mailed you at ; j VUvOi , The Jierthwentern National baa Just i ' rendered their Twenly-SeTenth an- i nual statement: I an established Company with more than 138,900,. 900.S0 of Insurance In force, insarlng Men and Women at equal rates. i Office Rms. 20-22, the new Foley Bldg ! F1SHIB MALL, Gen'l Agents! P. a Lock Box 893, S La Grande, Oregon. j j : Mr. E. U Evena, teacher of artiste i t piano playlag aad harmony. pBe ! Black sl. Ham Sttiala DAY OLD ! CHICKS 1 From standard bred Khode Island Reds Black Minorcas White Leghorns and your own hatched In onr moth hatchery. eggs mam- Descriptive . circular aad price list for tee asking. l08.Thlr;i I C. C. COOLIDGfi Pboa Red 3702. XA GRANDE Let Hendrlck ruse It. Bex 732. St. 9-38-tf f ,