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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1914)
LA UlilXDJi EVEMNU UJJj&Llt 'Ell V.GV: FOUIl TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 19ft. THE OBSERVER BRUCE DENNIS, Editor and Owner. Entered in the Post Office at La Grande, Oregon, as' second class matter. . Advertising rates on application. All copy for display advertising must reach the office the day before the ad appears. Address' all communications to 1 THE OBSERVER, 1710 Sixth Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Daily, single copy 5c Daily, per week 15c Daily, per month 65c Daily, six months in advance. . . .$3.53 Daily, per year in advance.. ...$7.00 Daily, by mail per year, in ad vance $4-00 Weekly Observer-Star, per year in advance ................ $1.50 WHAT THRIFT DID FOR MAYO. The desirability of thrift , ana its . reward is most forcibly illnstrated in the life ot Col. J. C. Mayo of Paintsville, Kentucky, who died re cently in New York. Col. Mayo is said to have been the largest landholder x in Kentucky and was undoubtedly the wealthiest man in the state, possess- ing a fortune of many millions. Born a poor mountaineer, Mayo got ind declares that this certainty has made him utterly wretched. It is r.of hard to believe this. He worked hard in a London office until he got his windfall. Then he determined to leave his job until he got something more congenial, something that op ened up great prospects and a quick return. "My first idea," he said, "was to have a long holiday. I've been having that holiday ever since. I broke my old habits in life. I learned to loaf. I am not preaching a sermon, so I will say at once that there is quite a lot to be said for loaf ing. But you cannot loaf properly on 300 pounds a year, for that amount a year only gives you time to develop inclinations which you' have not the means to gratify." He is now coming to America be cause he cannot live properly on $1,500 a year here and! will have to work. Wise man. In new work he may become a new man, he believes,. I", work of any kind he will become a man again. It is work that keeps most of us alive. A vacation is all right but it grows monotonous if pro. lcnged. To enjoy idleness one must be brought up to enjoy it, and then, usually, it is a curse. It is work that is the blessing. provide many men with an excellent x-.-use for not having a vegetable garden. However, the "safety first" move ntent came too late to help Jonah. Falling In Love. A mntnrrVf.li rirlar ivaa trill..! in enough education to teach school at . Chicago by dashing headlong into a small pay. It was not so small, how ever, but what he was able to put steam roller. When will an impatient aside a portion of it. He became in- ( generation learn that even a motor ttrested in the coal deposits in the cvcle has its imitations and it is , . , . sometimes wiser to go aground, region where he was born and " 6 raised, and all the ' money he could j scrimp together went to buying op-1 Five"ent operas are near, is a tions. These in time he marketed Promise from son. He cannot, with outside capitalists, and in due,however' exPwt them 10 supplant pllflUhlflr mim in tna nfTnitinnr. t U course companies were launched that , 6 """ mc started coal operations on a large scale. girls. In this way, before he becamo 50 After glancing at some of the love litters presented in this season's years oldl Mr. Mayo had amassed a 'in ;, breach of promise suits, one does not fortune of many millions. To du- ,. .u .u -i j. . , . ' .. , t. , ' .wonder that the railroads want more optional and charitable institutions he ' . ... . . ., . , , . r.ioney for carrying the mail. became a liberal contributor and his private benefactions were large. I Swkzerland "has cnanged her mind Had Col. Mayo not lived economic aild wil take part fa gan Francis ally and saved his money he would CJ exposition. Even Switzerland re have been obliged to pass his op- vaIue of advertising. portunity when it came to him. Others millions of them have been ' A Chicago man is suing his mother ol.liged to pass them for this very ' in-law for $50,000. Wonder if they reason. Only here and there is to'slook hands before going to their bi found a man . prepared to meet ' corners, the big opportunity when it comes to him. Col. Mayo was one of them and the habit of thrift was responsible for his later success. WORK IS A BLESSING. Have you ever noticed that when some men who have worked hard all their lives retire they become feebls almost immediately and lose all their interest in life? It is not true in all cases but there are enough such in stances to make the fact conspicuous. Work is merely a recreation to them because it has become a life habit. Deprived of work they are lost. A London bachelor wrote to a news paper recently that being assured of an income, without working for it, has proved a curse to him. He has an income of about $1,500 a year The Woodrow Wilson tango is de scribed thusly: One step forward, three steps' back, then reverse, side step and hesitate. Paris reports a woman changing iuto a man. The English suffragettes are trying to do it, with little success. An American sculptor has made a bust of William Jennings Bryan. Of course, it must be a speaking like ness. A balloon that exploded in France injured GO persons. It is getting so that aviation is becoming about as dangerous as navigation. - ( Tho ravages of the insect pests . ..1 La Grande National Bank Organized in 1887. DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF UNITED STATES GOVERN MENT. UNITED STATES POSTAL SAVINGS DEPOSITORY. Capital .$100,000.00 Surplus .$140,000.00 Total Resources $1,000,000.00 For twenty years, in all kinds of financial weather, we have successfully catered to the monetary wants of the people of La Grande and the Grand Ronde Valley. We respectfully solicit your business. La Grande National Bank La Grande, Oregon La Grande, Ore., June 23. (To the editor.) Falling in love is the hard est thing on a fellow's nerve we know anything about, it takes all the puck er out of him; it incapitates him from business and renders him aconvtr- sational curiosity. We had the mal ady once, and speak from experience. If a fellow in love don't manifest tho above symptoms and a good many more, his is not a genyine case, or he has a lot more ginger than the aver age fellow. " Falling in love is like, the measles, when a fellow hag it right he shows it all over. It is very contagious, a fellow rarely fails to take, it when he gets on the leeward side of the proper party. In rare instances we have known persons to have a second attack of it, but, once in a lifetime id about the average. In the treatment of this affliction it is best to get the patient entirely away from the influence that caused it, if it can be done; he may regain his reason in a short time, although it takes months and even ; years in some cases. . - The epistolary part usually attend ing the disease usually plays havoc with the curative agencies; the parties watch each other closely, although they may be hundreds of miles apart, and upon the least si"" "f a return to sanity a letter is written, which upsets all hope of a cure for the time. The gag has been used, with success, but cannot be relied upon to affect a cure in obstinate cases. Sometimes cases are found where the most painful object lessons will not cause cure. Even when shown that our laws will condemn a fellow to hard labor for life if he' persists in carrying his malady to its logical sequence. i And, lastly, if all othcrremedies fail, it should! be shown, to the patient that in a short time sometimes much shorter than it should be an extra plate a tin one will likely be need ed on the table, and then another and another, until sometimes a dozen are needed. This latter remedy is used only in the worst cases and jf it faifS to cure, the case is hopeless.' DICK'PRIGG. and the credit becomes weekly in stead of monthly. Manufacturers Pleaded For. R. Raymond, representing the Man ufacturers Association, as its secre tary, asked that at the November election, or at the next legislature, effort be made to pass a bill allowing Oregon manufacturers a five percent margin of difference over the outside bidder for county and municipal bids. Some Markets Alright. E. N. Warner of Medford, spoke on public markets, and said that where the purpose of the market was to bring the producer nearer to the cus tomer, the public market now in vogue in many places, was satisfac tory, but of then this was not the case. The same requirements should ' be made of both public market manage ments and the retailer, he demanded, but in vsome instances one or the other is persecuted generally the re tailer. . ! .. , BUFFALO VERNON HERE. (Continued from Page 1.) 0-1 for the edification of the visitors. It will be some show, for which Spain brothers, Zeek, Corbett, Vernon and the actors who will take part, vouch by all that is dear to cowboys.' The big stunt starts at 2 o'clock or shortly thereafter. - ORDER EARLY THIS GOSSARO CORSET IS PRICED AT $2.00 Young women who have mentally decided on a Gossard Corset each season, and then put it off because of price, will appreciate the New Gossard Model here shown at $2.00. THEMES FOR SPEECHES. (Continued from Page 1 ) the contention of the speech on stand ardization of merchandise. "Co-operation means," he said, that "You just co-operate first and the others then can.' The speech developed a somewhat bitter attack on the bill for standardization of manufacturers' labels, introduced by Stevens of Ken tucky. The speaker asserted there were jokers in it, and said that it would in the ultimate result injure the individual retailer and assist the monopolistic manufacturer. This point was disputed from the audience and Mr. Denton went back to the ros trum and further attacked the bill. "Practicalize co-operation." he warned. "Tomorrow a resolution will come up,' he said, "which will urge this convention to support the standardization of all goods, and then the merchant can show his customer the price and quality mark, and the customer will know what he is get ting. Merchandise must be standard ized to get the greatest results." he r.flirmed with emphasis. Advertising Discussed. Fred Bolger, advertising manacrer for Meier & Frank of Portland, was one of the speakers last night and his address was a "hummer." He cited three essentials of everv niece of ad copy attractiveness, Interest and convincing powers. "Think out carefully," he cited, "a spotlight cap tion that will catch the eye, and then make the booty of the ad such that it will hold the interest of the reader, and finally convince that the story told is the best that could be told." Geo. A. Ostrom, of the Beaver State Merchants' Mutual Fire Insur urne company spoke with a great deal of edification to the audience on his subject. Weekly Pay-day Needed. Yesterday afternoon Senator Dan Kellaher of Portland, delivered a stir ring address. He urged that all firms and corporations in Oregon adopt the weekly pay-day basis. Cor porations frequently hold up 45 dtiys of pay thus curtailing circulation of money, increasing tho capital of the merchant," increasing the credit, and generally making things bad. Where a weekly pay-day basis is used, more money is kept in circulation weekly STORE WILL BE CLOSED AT 12 O'CLOCK, NOON, WEDNES-DAY. Everybody going to the Wild West Show, SEE BUFFALO VERNON BULL DOG THE STEER. Phone us your Order J. G. Snodgrass, Grocer MAIN 43 LOST Yesterday a bunch of keys. HOUSE KEEPING room, private four on ring. Return to Observer bath, ground floor 1311 N. Ave. office. 6-23-tf. 6-23-tf. Come for a trial fitting, it does not oblige you or I will call or you, by appointment in your own home. A complete line of all models on hand. Prices at from $2.00 to $8.50. Mrs, Roht. Pattison Corseiere, Phone Red 3221 or Res. 1702, Cor. Spring and Oak. Budweiser and Rainier e o B R o o Delivered to any part of the city. Family trade a specialty B. W HUGHES, Agent Distributor for Baker, Grant Union and Wallowa Counties Moose Billiard Parlors 180 Depot St. THE BEST EVER; Read carefully and you will agree with us. Modern house of seven rooms; full basement; lot 60x110; only one block east of the court house; just built; only $2500.00; $300 down, balance easy terms. Sidewalks petitioned for and will be put in as soon as arrangements can be made. Tim is cheap at this price and on these terms. A nice home for someone. You are sure to be interested in these bargains. Let us show them to you. For Sale. House, modem, 28x36, full basement; lot 60x110; $2000.00; $200.00 down, balance monthly payments. Or will trade for property ofequal value. Modern house of four rooms, lot 60x110 ; good wood house. All street and sew er assessments paid; $1S50; one-half cash, balance to suit buyer. Modern six-room house, close in; lot 60x120; a bargain, $4000.00, $750 down, balance in monthly payments. 3tr,eetimprovements all paid. Within four blocks of the Postoffice. O. J. Black , Co. Phone Main 754 111 Depot Street La Grande, Ore. fit Q 'S'illk. ,.s- ,-,