Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1914)
PAGE FOUR LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1914. TME OBSERVER BRUCE DENNIS, Editor and Owner, Entered in the Post .' Grande, Oregon, as matter. Office at La second claia Advertising rates on application. All copy for display advertising must : reach the office the day bjfora the ad appears. Address all communications to THE OBSERVER, 1710 Sixth Street, SUBSCRIPTION RATES: , Daily, single copy . .5c Dally, per week 15c Daily, per month .65c Daily, six months in advance .'...I3JS0 Daily, per year in advance. $7.00 Daily, by mail per year, in ad vance.... '...i. $4.00 Wgekly Ovserver, per year in AdTiWe ....SL50 independence that is not pleasing to the Journal and the other Democratic dictators. But the Judge is a strong character and on his personal strength he is giving his opponents a few headaches. Mr. Maning is popu lar in Multnomah and is gaining quite a little strength over the state. Regardless of the outcome it is positively ' refreshing to see some st. ife among the Bourbon herd, to see for once a time when they are not all jumping over the same gait and sing ing the same songs. Let the fight wax warm for there by the people will learn the merit of each candidate. '.'..' BEAUTIFUL, JOYOUS EASTER. Yesterday' !4wl Easter. Throughout Eastern Oregon the sun shone vtiffafyi the air was clear and crisp and everyoM eemed ho hunvahcv of the occasion so thor oughly cherished and respected. La Grande people, true' to their ever present loyalty to Christian oc casions, were out to the different houses of worship and spent the day in a manner that was delightfully ap propriate to the occaaion. Knights Templar from Baker, Pen dleton and La Grande met as is their custom and held the annual service provided by their order, , La Grande "was host yesterday to the other cities and the entertainment was of BUch nature as to call forth pretty words of praise; 1 Yes, it was a glorious EastA What a blessing and a privilege it is to live on such occasions; and to live in a community where the proper respect and observance is shown, as it was in this city. Bert Kelly, a famous buckaroo of Pendleton Roundup fame, has just died from injuries received while per forming at the Roundup last summer. Really, this is hot a very strong re commendation for Pendleton's big show. Have we reached the point when human lives must be sacrificed for the fake of strenuous entertain ment? tj "?i1"wh"' ' ' V J. G. Kilpack, of the Boys' and Girls Aid, has uncovered a debauched condition of the young at Milton in Umatilla county. Milton is a little town which to the casual observer appears to be one of the best regu lated in the country and free from all temptations. Yet Mr. Kilpack, who is a truthful eentloman, affirms that vice is rampant among tho young sters. This is truly a very bad show ing. Guess the old time parent was right when he said, "Spare the rod spoil the child." Moral suasion seems to fail with a great portion of humanity and - polico regulation is , needed. ftunnlno W.ter. Have yon ever noticed. wheH the wa ter has almost all run out of the bath tub, bow the light particles on the sur foce seem then to race out much faster tbnu the Water? As a matter of fact, Mil!- are traveling faster than most of fto' Water, but no faster than that on lie surface. ' Tie reason Is nyt far to seek. Run ning water, even In u river, goes at dif ferent rate:', but fastest on the top sur right ir. the middle of tuf HtrJTB. ,.-rio'i, -u h sjdes itiid bottom m.llieB lUo v;iieT there go more B)owlj So the light pHi'tteles on. top o? the -.:ur In the bathtub, Along with the -tirf.ioo witt., rtmli iiliead at a good '.hie-. Ti'.lS particular ieculiarlry In rivers 16 utilized by boatmen when they have to go up n swift stream; they always puddle up near the bnnk. And at curves, as the water swings ouiwuru, mey take the inside 'bunk, for there the water Is almost still. On the other hand. In coming down the very center of tho stream la chosen. St. Louis Re public. ' Washington Official Life. Dinners mid social functions are conspicuous features of Washington life. The new senator or congressman always feels that ho must keep up the pace, but hl older colleagues Qo not hesitate to send in their regrets now and then. Ono senator whose young daughters make severe demands upon him as an escort to olllclal functions; said: "I have cut out all dinners and func tions except those 1 feel under ohllga tlons to attend In my oflielal capacity. "I have done this for two reasons: First, because I have not time to attend thorn. I have too much to do. Second, Mr. SpofTord. so long librarian of con gress, once told me that most public men and army and navy otllcers who died In Washington 'dug their graves with tlielr own teeth a saying which I have taken to heart." National Magazine. DEMOCRATS NOT UNITED. Who could have ever imagined that Oregon's Democratic party would have split on its choice for a candi date for any office? For yenrs and years such could not have happened, but when a party reaches a position of power then it is that human selfishness appears. It used to be with Democrats not a question of who shall run for gover nor, but unite on a man and elect him Now, that party has Dr. Smith, John Manning and Judge Bennett all seek ii.g n nomination. And they are seek ing it industriously. Some thought two of the three would pull out be fore the primary struggle, but not so. Kach is in to tho finish. Dr. Smith is backed by the present administration and the Portland Journal. Whether . Chamberlain is lending aid to the doctor is not a matter of written record, but it is argued that he cannot ufford to pad dle up stream against tho governor and the Journal. Summing the mat ter up, Dr. Smith seems to have the Democratic machine behind him. Judge Bennett is a sort of free A Chinese Superstition. When a Chinese baby takes a imp people think Its soul Is having a rest going out fur a long walk perhaps. If the nap Is a very long one the mother displacing individual fishermen. Is frightened. Nhe is nrraici miu ner i ROUND THE WORLD Belgium has 400 goat insurance so defies. ,- Massachusetts has over 100 woman lawyers. New York now has 1,638 firemen on Its pension list Paris makers are offering 400 shades In women's wigs. ' . , Chicago now has a church devoted to the deaf and dumb. Jersey City home for the blind is to to have a new building to cost $100, 000. ' . ' .. About 400 arrests for counterfeiting are made in the United States each year Bricks made of peat are being suc cessfully used in Sweden for small buildings. Females outnumber the males in Philadelphia, New York, Baltimore and Boston. '.'- The United States has made more rapid progress In Iron production than any other country. The height of buildings In Hungari an cities is limited by law to eighty two and one-half feet According to Dr. Clement Lncas of England, the human family is likely to become a ono toed race. ' . , Recent statistics, tfodlt be United States with aUffil one automobile for each two ffifies of country Wad. At the present time 113 women have the, rtghf to wear the coveted red rib bon Of the French Legion of Honor. . Co-operative rural credit associations are planned for the Philippine Islands The object Is to help the small farmer. Some of the finest lace in the world is made by tbe women of the Philip pine Islands from a strong silky fiber obtained from pineapple leaves, v, ; Solidified alcohol In cube form is SSSiitig" Into use In Germany foe neck ing and other purposes lor Which small amounts of beat are sufficient' A recent census, tbe first of the kind ever taken, credited Denmark, which has about dhe-tblrd tbe area of Wis consin, with" mbr than 8,000;000 'fruit trees. ' , An express rutin b-ftvetthfc tWm Nice to Macon, Frantte, was beaten by twelve minutes by fen eagle which raced it over a distance of eighteen miles. ) Few turtles ore being caught these days In the Bahamas, the f annual catching having diminished for Borne time. Exportation of turtle shell may soon cease. A life preserver of European Inven tion for seagoing vessels is Intended to keep a person fairly warm and dry for several days as be floats about awaiting rescue. It is said that the first man to cross the continent on a motorcar was George A. Wyman of Sau Francisco, who performed tbe feat during the summer of 11)03. Brazil claims to be tbe country which possesses the most precious timber for general construction and shipbuilding and for the manufacture of furniture and other nrtieles. The Turkish government has given a French bank a concession to build -an electric railroad between Jerusalem and Bethlehem nnd for lighting the former city with electricity. According to an Italian scientist who has classified 4.000 eases of self do structlon. more suicides occur between the ages of fifteen and twenty-live than at any other period In life. Statistics show that Ireland's fish eries continue to decline In amount of fish landed and the number of men and bouts engaged. Capitalists are baby's soul has wandered too far away and canhot find Its way home. If It doesn't come back, of course tho baby will never awaken. Sometimes men are sept out Into the streets to call the baby's iiiinie over and over again, as though it were ri real child lost. They hope to lead the soul back home. If a baby sleeps while It Is being carried from one place to another the uangcr of losing the soul along the way Is very ng 0n pnt0 Ono of the largest forest nurseries in the United States Is conducted by the forest service near Haugeu. Mont. It Is known as the Suveniic nursery and has ft capacity of 4,nno,000 young trees a year. - Iron alloyed with gold Is being Intro duced as a substitute for tin In the making of cans. The resulting prod uct Is proof against corrosion of most kinds, but costs fifteen times as much great. So whoever carries the little one keeps saying Its name out louil, so that the soul' will not stray away. They think of the soul as a bird hopping along after them. Twenty New $15. to $20.00 Dresses Re duced to 0.90 Just twenty of these attractive new styles in Spring and Summer Dresses offered at this now price. ; Included are .the popular new weaves in plaid and mixed ratines, heavy messalines and silk poplins. All ; the wanted shades. Your choice this week for. $9.90 p Pg-'. '.-.'' Modish New Skirts Just Arrived Separate skirts are more popular than in any pre- ; viqus season and this new shipment makes onr style showing complete. Materials of' s.-ges, ratines and crepes are in the flounced ani draped high sty'es. Prices tro-m ,..;,..;.',.,. , .............. $5.00 to $12.00 " '" Silk Suits and Coats Most prominent of all materials tor Spring and ' Summer ?re these charming Co'af.s and Suits of ; silk poplins, brocades and silk moire 5 Many new models have arrived the last week att l are now on display in our ejceliirixe Eeady-to-We ic Department. Prices fang- fvcm . ...............$22.50 to $40.00 ill . it' Newest Cloth Coats from $7.50 to $25.00 were killed mat year hi Siberia for their fur. . The tails alone weighed mom than twenty-one tons. The ant tnal figuring nest In the fur trade of Asiatic Russia In point of numbers was the white hare, which contributed 1,500.000 skins. A landowner named Rizony, living at the Hungarian town of Mlskolez. who died recently, hns left his fortune, amounting to $00,000. to the Hunga rian Provincial Society For the Pre vention of Cruelty to Animals on con dition that ft erects an asylum for wornout horses. Clever Elephant. "Elephants are clever animals," said a trainer, "and I once had one that could rend, lie was a quarrelsome beast, and one day he got Into a scrape Willi the Hengal tiger, and before wo could get them separated he had his trunk badly damaged. After the scrim mage was over the elephant broke loose and started down the street fast 'He's going wild!' somebody shouted. 'Don't you believe It.' says 1. Now, where do you suppose that elephant went to?" "Went to the surgeon's, I suppose. Can't you get up n better yarn?" "No, he didn't go to tho surgeon's. He went straight to a llttlo shop where a sign read, 'Trunks repaired whlloyou wait' Of course ho had inailo a nils lance in Democratic circles. He re- take. Hut what do you expect of a poor aumn nruiet jjonuon uioue. fuses to stand at times and shows an The readluess of Africans to accept and pay for modern methods of trans portation Is Illustrated by tho fact that of 18,000 passengers carried In on month by tho Tripoli railway 15.00U were Arabs. Italy has established a strict censor ship on moving pictures. Pictures por traying scenes distasteful or contrary to public decency and morality, espe- i daily those reproducing acts of cruelty ' or which might bo an Incentive to i crime, aro forbidden. Literature In Turkey has responded to the liberty that followed the revolu tion. Largo numbers of translations tind adaptations of European scientific , and literary works and books of a pop ular nature aro now available. Ono of the longest bridges in the world wilt soon be built by Germany. It w)ll give railroad connection be tween Itugen, an Island In tbe Baltic sea. and the mainland of Germany. The length will bo about 11.000 feet and the cost about $5,000,000. I ' More- than 4.BO0.0O0 gray squirrels 'Winter's Short Days. If I were to paint the short days of winter 1 should paint two towering icebergs approaching each other like liromoutorles for morning and evening, with cavernous recesses nnd a solitary traveler wrapping his cloak about him and bent forward against the driving storm just entering the narrow pass. I would paint the light of a taper at midday seen through a cottage win- .ow. half buried in snow anil irosr. ' In the foreground should appear :'.u harvest nnd far In the background trough the pass should be seen the iwers In the fields and other evl 'ences of spring. On the right and ft of the approaching icebergs the 'eiiveiis should be shaded off from the 'ight of midday to midnight with its siars. the sun being low in the sky. Henry David Tlioreau. Electromagnets. .An electromagnet consists, essential ly, of a core of soft Iron surrounded by many turns of Insulated copper wire through which n powerful electric cur rent Is made to flow. When the cttr rent starts flowing the Iron instantly becomes n magnet, and when the cur rent Is shut off tho Iron Just as instant ly loses Its magnetism. An electromag net can be made much more powerful than n permanent magnet of steel, and It Is also much more useful, because Its magnetism may be turned on and off at will. It Is indispensable In making telegraph Instruments, and In recent years It has become hardly less Indis pensable as a kind of giant derrick hand for picking up tons of steel and Iron and depositing them wherever they are wanted. New York Journal. . UL-O-J 1 I U. LOTTIES Wholesale Liquor Dealer 1118 Jefferson Ave La Grande Ore. FOR PRICES & QUALITY ON WHISKIES WINES BRANDIES GINS, ETC. PHONE, Black 51 Distributor Of i Lemp's St. Louis Beer Reason to Worry. "Ton look scared." "I guess you'd be If you were as sick as I am." "Pshaw! You're not seriously sick." "I didn't think I was, either, but 1 ran see that the doctor Is beginning to worry over my case." Tie's worrying, all right; he told me that ho didn't expect you'd pay htm unless he brought suit." Houston rost. La Grande National Bank Organized in 1887. VIS1CUUTED DEPOSITOR! OF CTITED STATES 60VEB3HCEHT. J j.vTJinnTED STATES POSTA1 SAYINGS DEP0S1T0M. Capital JlOOloOO.OO Surplus $140,000.00 Total Resource $1.000,000.00 For twenty-six years, in all kinds of financial weather, we have successfully catered to the monetary wants of the peopl. c4! La Grande and the Grande Ronde Valley. We respectfully solicit your business. La Grande National Bank La Grande, Oregon HOT