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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1913)
i If WESTS RER BEING SALE Offers Still Greater Bargains in Every Department. Every Artiok Stcck Must Go at a Sacrifice Mm 100 Men's Suits, ues to $25.00, at Greater WdfdivWesfs 11 ... THE OBSERVER BRUCE DENNIS, Editor and Owner Entered - in the post-office at La Grande, Oregon, as second class, natter., : ' ' ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Daily, single copy 5e Daily, per week . ... ... . . . ... . i Daily, per month ............ Daily, per six months in ad ' ' vance . ..................... Daily, per year in advance.... Daily, by mail per year in ad vance 15c $3.50 .$7.00 $4.00 Weekly Observer, per year in advance ....i... ........ ... $1.50 i : : ' r Advertising rates on application. AH ; copy for display advertising must reach the office the day before the t ad appears Address all communications to THE OBSERVER, 1710 Sixth La Grande, Oregon. A baby at Marshall, Mich., fell from a second story window into a tub of soft water and was unhurt." Had it been hard water, the fall might have been fatal. A man at Merrill, Mich., was cured of a nervous affliction by shock from a bolt of lightning. This remedy is not copyrighted. Anybody can take it . ' . Also, by getting up early you will be surprised at the people you meet going home. The girl who has just graduated from college may not be able to get into the kitchen and make pies like mother, but she is a mighty handsome ornament for the front porch. Just when everything is poinc alone smoothly a French scientist discovers that a couple of sun spots are missing Now we are all wrought up over that matter. The Test Time determines whether the policies under which a bank Is oper ated are safe. This bank has been In business twenty-six years. ;It has grown steadily until It has become one of the strongest, aud most prosperous financial Institutions In the West. The soundness ... policies Is attested by the long list of conserv ' atlve business n.en :. transact their business here; Jso by an " earned surplus of V 'i-v.00, tbe work of time and the res'ill of conservative managem.it. This bank baa facilities for Uking care of more high grade b-n'.-nes8 in1 offers tie services to those who appreciate the best In banking. La Grande National Bank La Grande, Oregon Capital, $100,000.00 Surplus, $130,000.00 Resources, 1,100.000.08 DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF CMTED STATES GOTERXMEST. UNITED STATES POSTAL SAYINGS DEPOSITORY. val- ( H Q fh - P W Savings on Dry Goods Beads and Nettinq , ; Are the Latest ModestiFads By Margaret Mason. (Written for the United Press.) She always dressed in black, Though it wasn't from a lack Of a husband or of other garments rare. But being a'brunette. She looked a silhouette, ' Till she stepped into a taxi and turn ed fare.; ; -New York, July 4. "Mrs. Black 'is back!" Rose Madder, Pearl Grey, Olive Green and a1 the other hueful adies have t0 teke a back seat after their prismatic color riot of the spring and early summer. All black gowns and hats' have come into or rather onto 1)1011. mm n train. Tfc is true a touch rl decided decollete corsage livens most of them up as if with a high light. It tends to soften the severe contrast of the plain black against the skin. Soft charmeuse and filmy crepe are the favorite materi als for the graceful draped black gowns, but taffeta is smart for the little troteur suits and frocks. Beads or No Beads? To bead or not to bead that is the question. One quaint black frock worn at the recent international polo match was all over embroidered in red and green beads in a pattern of crimson ramblers climbing over lattices. It was worn by a slender debutante and seemed a trifle ornate for such youth ful charms. . The Latest In Dress. A peasant bodice cut out square to the bast Kne r.nd !r. vrlih fc!:b of soft chiffon or net is gradually win ning by a neck over the pointed decol lete. As with all necks, whether round, square or V shaped it has its omnipresent ruche of pleated blue lace or net, ard an o some of these gowns shows a fall of of Time 25 Women's Suits, fftf fkfh reg. $25.00 values VFVr windows for extra specials during July m lace in the middle of the back from the upstanding de Medici ruff -a jabot worn behind. ; , A military cape is the newest cloak for traveling. It is comfortable and smart at the same time and can be worn over a gown, a suit or even a filmy evening toilette, In cadet blue lined in scarlet and with a gleam of brass buttons it is , truly dashing enough for fashion's vivandiere. : Transparent Sleeve ' Popular. , The transparent sieeve is another innovation gaining wide spread popu larity these fervid days. They are of chiffon or net and found in all and every sort of gown. So easily are they seen through that yon can't hay anything up your sleeve any more. Black chiffon sleeves in an ebony char meuse creation are especially lovely. With a Chantilly lace fichu over white chiffon draping the low neck of this t for more than four minutes. gown and a huge flat hat of black crin .The Oregon boy had been a favor veiled in the inevitable net the whole jte at od(Jg as high as 2 to 1. When dusky effect is most artistic The net he went down( the crowd thought he manufacturers are certainly netting i was dead Cross thought so too.. In- enormous profits this season. Hints as To Colors. j easterner bent anxiously over his pros- , Nielson has a clear recollection of the A last concession to the gorgeous trate adversary anj when Anderson ' steering gear failing to work. While tints of Futurist ilks seen in the wide finaiy raHied the vanquished pugilist! the injuries are painful to all, none sashes of vivid plaid taffet worn with' wag helped to his corner by the victor, j of them anticipate serious consequenc bolero suits of black taffeta. Wrap- Anderson was so weak that he had es or much delay in complete recov- ped in the plain ana crownea wnn a tam-o-shanter of biacK net you iook already for a Highland fling, and al- together clannish and ."Hoot monish. iiiacK anci wnite siripea cubiumra strikingly zebraesque in morif are run ning the ajl black costumes a close sec ond. It is merely a question of the running at that whether the zebra frocks are fit for fat and fair females or smart and suitable for slendeJ sylphs. Running up and down these striped gowns are guaranteed to re duce the rtly person at least a pound a stripe while draped horizontally around a bean pole figure it immedi ately assumes the proportions of a pudge. As black as your hat is no idle phrase now-a-days. The blacker the smarter, and all are trimmed in flut ed tulle and tufts of black Paradise or Numidie. In spite of the triumph of art over nature in the matter oi artificial flowers, lovely women still insist on having a feather in her. cap "Explorer" Reaches St. Paul. St. Paul, Minn., July 5. A. J. Koehn, the United States naval offi cer, who is making a trip from the source of the Mississippi river to its mouth, arrived here today. The last half dozen miles to this city he had an escort of a score or more of small boats. Mayor Keller and Governot Eberhart welcomed Koehn and each gave him a message to the mayors and governors of cities and states where he will make stops along the route. Koehn is making the journey in a sixteen-foot row boa,t, provided with cooking and sleeping accommoda tions. He has so far been easily able to keep to his schedule for the trip and plans to make the entire distance in ninety days. Delinquent Fees Cause Suits. Salem, Ore., July 5. According to announcement by Corporation Commis sioner Watson, all corporations delin quent with their annual license fees will be prosecuted. The fees are due . July 1st, and become delinquent on the 15th. A great many are said to be delinquent and a big group of pros- ecutions threaten to be on the boards on the 15th. 150 pr Women's Oxfords, val. to $4.00, at 98c AMir lll'llnl IL : : b mm i ( Tiifi ti'i'iiiL'r i KNOCKED OUT VANCOUVER LAD MEETS WATER LOO IN TWELFTH. Adversary and Crowds Thought Bud Had Been Killed. Los Angeles, July 5. Leach Cross the New York lightweight, finished Bud Anderson of Oregon yesterday af ternoon with a right swing to the jawj in the twelfth of what was carded as a 20-round battle. The blow landed :vAth terrific force and Anderson was stead of retirine from the rim? the to be carried to his dressing room. r . . th fi ht th In vprnn(i j,- KPnt. the Oree-on firiiter t.pvawling upon his back. In the suc- cee(jing round the New York boy pun- ished Anderson severely while avoid ing nearly everything the Oregon bs- aimed at him. Anderson's face and body were pounded unmercifully and in the fourth round a straight nrm jab delivered by the dentist relived him of a tooth. Cross Fire Bliw Wins. San Francisco, July 5. A wicked right cross the same blow which had forced Wclgast to foul away the light weight championship proved too great a stumbling block for Joe River; in his attempt to wrest the lightweight title from Champion Ritchie Friday. The Alexican was knocked out in rthe (leveiith round of a scheduled 20-round i.atUe. ' - Immediately preceding the knockout Ritchie toppled his victim ovor f oi - the count of nine with a right to the jaw. Another right to the chin pre - ceded by a left to the stomach settled Rivers' chances as a lightweight con-! tender. , Twice during the early rounds it J looked as if Rivers might win, Ritch- ie's wonderful ring generalship and ability to strike effectively straight from the shoulder . with either hand however, offset the Mexican's tremen- I dous swings which frequently found. their work. After the fifth round J Rivers swung wildly. I At the start both men on their met- i tie were eager to mix at close rar!ge. j J The first round left no choice, but in J the second, third and fourth rounds the Mexican punished severely with swings to the face and body, several of which staggered Ritchie. $, MEDFOUD AUTO RACE FATAL t Medford, Ore., July 6. The condition of Newton H. Mark, ? vhe Mechanician in the car with J fc Donald Helms, aged twenty, a ? driver, who was killed in a race here yesterday, is , unchanged. Mark was seriously injured. $.$$-lJS",S,'i,S,'t 25 Women's Dresses' (tj f (Thfk values up to $15.00 W . . II! (Continued trom Paee 1.) rushed to the car and pulled the lit tle boy out from under the car a gear load resting on his ' abdomen.. Mrs fielson was pinioned under the seat but lying on an occupant of the rear seat. It is mysterious to us how any escaped instant death and if any one thing is responsible it was the fact that the top of the car was vup. . A heavier car would have ground all of hem to pieces. " "We stopped the engine and help ed pull the wounded people out of the debris, amazed that any of them were alive." ' j One fortunate phase of the accident was that it happened near town, close to the old fairgrounds, and surgical aid could hurridly be brought to the suf ferers. Neither Mrs. Nielson nor the other occupants of the car have clear ideas of what happened, for the ma chine turned turtle so suddenly that in the excitement actual developments I were overlooked and forgotten Mrs. ery. SWIMMER IS HURT. Narrow Escape From Drowning Is Lot ' Falling to L. Nelson. To go over the Oro Dell dam, a dis- tance of fully 20 feet, and strike his I g????" BI'G SHOW OF Northwest Low Round Trip Fares , i ' J From all stations on the SALE DATES JULY 13-14-16-18 Seattle and Return Aeroplane Flights Boat Races Great Street Parade EVERYTHING Information Cheerfully Given by Agent 0.-W. R. & N i head on a timber, thereby losing coi sciousness, was the fate of L. Nelsoa a Palmer mill employe yesterday af. ternoon. Me was saved by the hero;-' and strenuous efforts of Alfred Car. son and Oscar Thompson. A grou of friends were picknicking just abote the dam -when all decided to go batt ing. Mr. Nelson though a husky yooij fellow, ventured out too far and vu caught in the swift stream and hurled over the falls. In going over he evj. dently struck on a timber and si tained serious scalp wounds that ren dered him unconscious. Alfred Car son and Oscar Thompson plunged into; the' foaming whirlpool and after it long struggle brought the wounddb man to shore and had him hurried tol surgical and medical attention.' Hal- escape is almost anexplaainable and'. rests entirely with his friends who saved him under adverse circumstan ces. NOTICE. Nnf.ice is herehv civen that a trnil- belonging to L. B. Barrett, whose last p known address was Cheyenne, Wym- 0 rti ing, was left in the Carbell Hotel Jt Baker as security for a board cm a $100.00, and the same will be boB to the -highest bidder on July 26th 1913. Adv. O. E. MORAN, Daily July 5, 12, 19, 26. Thirty-three Injured On '4th. New York, July 5. Thirty-three an injured as a direct result of the 4tU Seven drownings are reported. ; THE it. THE FINAL LIMIT JULY 21 TO j I I I 4 I i I $ J ! ' i I i i ; j v. FOR F V j I k