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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1914)
f LA 3&A&i evening observer FRIDAY. "AfARfTFr 13 iqi PAE FOL'R THE nRsFPVFRl'ore 9' "d beideB ' no use Porch 'gnoringr the danger BRUCE DENNIS, Editor and Owner. Entered In the Poet Grande, Oregon, ag matter. Office at La second clau Advertising rates on application. Ail copy for display advertising must reach the office the day before the ad appears. Address all communications to THE OBSERVER, 1710 Sixth Street, SUBSCRIPTION RATES: . Daily, single copy 5c Daily, per week 15c Daily, per month .', 65c Daily, six months in advance. . . .$3.50 Daily, per year in advance $7.00 Daily, by mail per year, in ad vance ...$4.00 Weekly Ovserver, per year In advance....' $1.50 THE COMMERCIAL CLUB. What to do about the local Commer cial club was the problem discussed last evening at a dinner in the Meth odist church basement where more than a hundred people congregated. : And it is a problem. ' Why ? . Because everyone wants a Commer cial club and would not think of dis solving the organization, yet the ex pense of upkeep is too great under the present plan of operation. A motios finally prevailed to sell the Commercial club equipment to the Y. M. C. A. As the matter now stands La Grande till has her Commercial club. The club room will be discontinued, and in its place a monthly luncheon will be served to members at which time dis cussion of things bearing on the city's welfare will occur. When there is anything to be done in a public man ner the executive board of the club will call the members together and do It : ,, We cannot see where the club has lost anything by last night's action except further indebtedness. Instead of having club rooms poorly patroniz ed we will have a monthly dinner well patronized and thereby have meetings of the club which were impossible to have when called for the club rooms. Public questions will not suffer by the change, neither will anything be left undone for the good of the city. It should be thoroughly understood that the present board of the club b a good, live, board; that there are many things now slated for develop ment under its administration, and that under no circumstances will the Com mercial club of La Grande die. As to who shall be secretary under the new plan that is left open to the board. John Rudd, secretary of the Y. M. C. A. has been spoken of for the place, but that is a matter for further consideration as Mr. Rudd has respon sible duties with his own organization and it is a question whether he can give the necessary attention to the club business. While the board wishes to reduce the indebtedness and by last night's action succeeded in curtailing the ex pense to a great extent, there should not be and is not a disposition to cut things so closely that full results may not be obtained. the law very difficult to enforce. Let the hour be 10 o'clock and let every child in the city be made to un derstand it meaning. And go one the. dangerous passway. The engineer, to be crossed, started bravely up the smoothe route, seemingly unaware of the approaching train steaming down MORE MONEY AVAILABLE (Continued Trom Fax 1.) KLEES AS A DELEVOPER. Leo Klees of Summerville, is doing a work of extensive benefit to Union county in perfecting a plan whereby he can deliver electric current to the farmers of the valley. Under his plan the expense to each individual will not be great and the very moment , that current is turned on every farm served will have increased in valuo at least ten times as much as the installation will have cost ifce farm owner. We call this clean, modern develop ment of a country. It will help take people back to the land, for it will equip the land with the modern con venience that electricity always brings. Mr. Klees is meeting with the suc cess he deserves and ere long every farm house in the north part of this county will be lighted with electricity. ENFORCE THE CURFEW LAW. At the meeting of the city commis sion last evening the enforcement of a curfew law was discussed. Proposal to change the curfew hour from 9 to 10 o'clock at night is a good, sane sug gestion for the last performance of the picture theatres does not finish be- step farther, let the fathers and moth' er understood its meaning, also, for they are really the ones to blame. If Cove had had curfew law work ing there would have been a lot of petty lawlessness overcome, and if La Grande also had been working under a proper curfew law some of the dis graceful proceedings that the court has been forced to record would have been eliminated. Proper restraint for the young is es sential. In the great old southland where woman is respected to a degree of almost worship girls are not per mitted to go out unattended in the evenings. Neither are late hours per mitted, and the chaperon is a part and portion of society's program. It is hard to improve on the way the south raises her daughters. Keep that in mind. dinner which was served in the com modious basement of the Methodist church, with the Ladies' Aid Society serving. I M,l -T CI a rr nnanaA tVi o tuut. prandial program with a catchy song number. John Collier briefly and con cisely set out the financial condition of the club whereby the club is at a $200 monthly expense for necessities and uses up all and more of its aver age income on maintenance and has little or nothing left for promotion work. Several speakers discussed var ious topics during the evening, Geo. Stoddard suggesting as a ne cessity for La Grande's success, more producers. Turner Oliver, misunder standing the motion,feared that the well acquainted and quite fond of the old dog, gave a warning whisle and checked speed slightly, but Maje un heeding the danger signal, continued his course without slacking his gait until just at the highest point of the trestle and immediately over the run ning water of Mill creek, their ways met or would have met, had not the big tired Newfoundland coolly stepped over the shinning rail and continued along on the end of the ties without any apparent discomfiture or nervous ness and miracuously escaped without a mishap. The incident was witnessed by em nloves of Dement's mill and mnnv others, but none were mere deeply in-1 club was KoinK to disintegrate and ALL RIGHT IF THEY DON'T POISON. By its decision that the government terested than the train men who wera anxiously watching from the cab win dow. MRS. M. M. BURNAPP. MADAM CLARC TALENTED. French Team at Arcade Shows Mas ter Singing Profession and Art. La Grande theatre goers will seldom cannot condemn foodstuffs unless it hear sinsrincr of a hieher order than is can show that substances added are being offered at the Arcade tonight and 1 being probably the first lady to injurious to health the supreme court tomorrow night. The initial perform- participate in a commercial ciud speecn arose to defend the institution's iden tity, but the new plan gives added stamina and virility rather than the other thing. Rev. E. B. Fyke point ed to the need of some advertisement in our own and neighboring states of the resources at hand here. Neighborhood Club Represented. Mrs. Turner Oliver delivered" one of the principal addresses of the even of the United States nullifies much ance last night was well received. of the pure food legislation which When a La Grande audience applauds has been passed. Under this ruling singers, and does it heartily as they the manufacturers' goods cannot be did last night, it is a certain sign that rejected so long as he doesn't mix the singers are of superior merit. The harmful substances with what he Bells, richness of tone of Alice Petit Clare Even experts ' disagree as to and her apparent ease, the beautiful what is not harmful. The ben- swelling and piano effects, the enthus- zoate of soda controversy proved that, Jistic vigor of expression and the great Perhaps formaldehyde, ' used to pre- volume which she is capable of produc serve corpses and occasionally to keep ing, mark her as a woman of splen- milk from souring, isn't going to send ded training. There is not one bad the user 'to his final home, but we tone in her entire range and that is don't want it in our stomachs ju3t the saying much. Most vaudeville singers same.. 'are not trained singers, but Madam The public indignation aroused by Clare is master of this beautiful art revelations of adulteration has been ' of classic and semi-classic music. directed at the fraud phase of it. We j Ken Metcalf supports her with a don't like to pay for chickory when . rich baritone voice of considerable we think we're buying coffee. We ' range, and sympathetic accompani- arent's so fond of talcum powder that ment. They are a real treat and are we want It in our bread. In fact, program of that sort. Mrs. Oliver went over the life of the club, with the intention of making it clear that the Commercial club had won renown in times past for its treatment of the woman's club. Profusely thanking the club for its friendly relations w:h the Neighborhood club in the past, Mrs. Oliver, for the club, swore alleg iance to the Commercial club by her association, and promised that both associations would and could hence forth work hand in hand for the com mercial advancement of La Grande. Launches Rest Spot Scheme. The speakers for the evening were asked to suggest some desired line of activity for the club to take up and Mrs. Oliver proposed the construction by the club of rest spots at every downtown street corner angle.- She Americans for all their reputed lik ing for spectacular humbugs have a deep-seated prejudice against being cheated over the counter. The supreme court may think we care most about our health and per- haps we do. Of course, we don't want $ to be fed prussic acid in our syrup' S or arsenic in our salad, but then some $ of us put squirrel whiskey into our,$ stomachs. Nicotine ren't supposed to j be a tonic, but a good many of us j pay real money to absorb it. After all, while we value our health, we'd be more in sympathy with the 'a supreme court if it would protect our j, I worth the price of admission alone. had In mind the Sixth and Washington, Adv. This is What Advertising Did. A lady lost a parcel contain ing two hair switches of consid erable value. "I am going to take the one chance in ten," she said, "to get them back. I know there are honest people and the person finding them may see the ad I inserted in the Observ er, and return them." On the following day the Observer was tnfnrmoH that tha awitfhoa. had pocketbooks. We'd worry along with . returned. Whether it is a hair switch, the poisons if someone would stop the shell game which some of the tnnA minnfB.liiMM nln. .... '. - nAU I uuu iimiiuiov.uiGia t " J " ' ua ill sell ing imitations. i (and that is a legitimate ar- tide of commerce,) or any other article of value, the ar- tide will in nearly all instances 3 be returned when the finder knows who lost it. What the finder wants is information concerning the name and ad- dress of the loser. If you have pig or chickens to sell if you S have animals to trade, if you Our sister city of Union is debating want to match a particular What a farce it all is: Portland has found that most of the dairies i supplying milk to that city are unclean and poorly kept. Yet the state is pay- i ing a large sum to have those same dairies come under the law or go out of business. the question of whether or not to F pave. Our advise to Union is to pave her business section, but pave. at a low cost. Take advantage of La Grande's experience and do not mortgage the ' whole city to a paving company. t $ Maje Also Wise Dog. ' La Grande, March 13. (To the Edi-, $ tor.) Noting the incident in last week's Observer of the sagacity of Neighbor Clark's dog, I would say1 "there are others," and if I may be allowed space would give an instance1 of which I am cognizant. I "Maje" had the care and guardian-1 ship of Mr. Frakes' family in the i neighboring city of Walla Walla, and on a certain occasion was- taken by the family on' a visit about 15 miles away. Finally as all things have an end so did the friendly visit, but the day. chosen by the family to return home was a very warm one and Maje con. temptiou.sly declining to ride in the buggy started out on a brisk trot to reach the desired home as soon as possible. On arriving in the city he came to the familiar railroad track horse you own and by match ing it make the team worth considerably more than two horses not matched would be worth, you can do that by find ing the horse like your own. There is no medium like a newspaper, for it reaches thou sands where you cannot meet more than a few hundred at the best. People who advertise and let business come to them know how quickly matters can be arranged by inserting a few lines at comparatively little cost. Dont spend dollars in gasoline and automobile tires looking for business, when it will come to your office through the medium of a small want ad. The test of the pudding is the eating thereof. The test of ad vertising is advertising. Fourth and Depot and other odd angle corners of the city. The tremendous need of such rest spots was cited and the plan hit a popular cord. In lack of a .city park in the business center, such rest spots are of immense value, she claimed. Many out of town guests attended the meeting, including Prof. D. C. Sower of the University of Oregon, who is here studying the La Grande form of government and accounting, and giving suggestions for improve ment where needed, not only here but in all Eastern Oregon cities. Cashier Lambert of the North Powder bank, F. H. Jelke of Joseph, Attorney Dan Boyd of Enterprise, and several others. f 4k S ADDITIONAL PERSONALS. F.' Evans of WallaWalla,a real es tate dealer, passed through this county seat this morning en route to Enter prise where he will close a real estate deal. Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Thorsen of Elgin, left this morning for that place after transacting business in the county seat Mr. Thorsen is cashier of the bank at Elgin. 3, ' Mr. and Mrs. Fred Johnson of Ad- ams, Ore., passed through the city this morning on their way to Enterprise, 3 where they will be the guest of friends for some time. Perry Blanchard of Union, stopped off in the city to look over building conditions. He is busy constructing 1 a new house in Imbler. During his stay here he was a guest of the Savoy. Price Gates Fined. After deciding to stand trial yester day on a charge of intoxication, Price which he knew would take hi mdirect Gates late in the day decided to plead to his pleasant homo and cool corner guilty and at 5 o'clock was fined $10.. Hyiton was reported dying, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Woodell of this city, left this morning for Imbler. Mr. Woodell will return tonight and Mrs. Woodell will go on to Summerville fcr a short visit with relatives. They were accompanied by their daughter Mary. Howard Coyle, of Walli Walla, passed through the city this morning on his way to Wallowa whither he has been called on account of the serious illness of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Jake Hyiton. Owing to a delay in delivery of a message he is a day late. ' Mrs. ATHLETIC VEST $nrtetjj Irgttd QIhiB "A Decided Improvement For Spring and Summer Wear" Note the larger armholes to permit free action and preclude perspiration. It is a real step toward com fort, an evolution upon the old style vest and does not in the least mar the appearance or fit in fact it a,dds to the perfect fitting qualities of Society Brand Clothes.; -. See Our New Society Brand Suits Today Prices from $20.00 to $27.50 vJCv- j NEW GORDON L JiljS ATS FOR SPRING W w ; '5ES $3.00 We are now handling the following coffees: Shilling's, White House; M. J. B.; Hills Bros.; Red Can; Royal Club and Pleaz All. These coffees are steel cut; sizes l's, 2's, 2's and 3's. We have a very fine quality of bulk coffees at 30c, 35c, 40c and 50c per pound. A fine line of Vegetables and Fruits for your Sunday dinner. COTTAGE CHEESE SATURDAY. PHONE MAIN 721 BERRY BROS. GROCERY La Grande National Bank Organized In 1887. BKSICftaTED DEPOSITORY OP FJflTEI) STATES OOYERNMENTt mUTKI) 8TATE8 POSTAL HA VINttS DEPOSIT!. Capital $100,000.00 Surplus $14b000i00 Total Resources ..$1,000,000.00 For twenty-six years, in all kinds of financial weather, we b successfully catered to the monetary wants of the people of U Grande and the Grande Ronde Valley. We respectfully solicit your business. La Grande National Ban La Grande, Oregon