WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1915
LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER
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J W Boys'
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C The sample store saves you money on every purchase.
j Boys Ulue bid uveraus
i Boys'. Summer Shoes
uuya guimirc( . vmici ncm pci
Boys Dress Shoes
Children's Shoes ,
Children's Slippers
"Misses' Pumps
v II Misses' Baby Doll Pumps
V ((Children's Stockings
I V TWa' Hmvv Rihherl Strir-kincs
-r J .
Boys' Shirts
Boys' Hate ..
, Caps .'. .....
Canvas Gloves
Hanson Auto
Stage Line
' 'Except Sunday .
' Leave La Grande to Union via
Hot Lake 8:30 a. m. s .
Leaves Union -to La Grande via
Hot Lake 10:30 a. m, "'.
Leaves La Grande to Union via
Hot Lake 4:00 p. m.
Leaves Union to La Grande via
Hot Lake 6:00 p. m. ,
7 Rates: La Grande to Union,
81.00, round trip $1.60. La
Grande to Hot Lake 50 cents,
round trip, $1.00.
Stand, Newlin Drug
Store
hrigation - Specialities
LET US FIGURE YtDUR WANTS
ELECTRIC MOTORS
' GASOLINE AND OIL ENGINES
Fresh from the well Auto-Pneumatic Water Systems
WINDMILLS AND WATER WHEELS
General
Agents
WANTED!
$2000.00 jWorth
Wanted Second hand bed room furniture, beds, springs, mattresses, dressers, chairs. ; v t"
, Wanted Living room furniture, library tables, book cases, rockers, rugs, ,couches, davenports.
Wanted Dining room furniture, extension tables, chairs, buffets, side boards. ;
Wanted Kitchen furniture, second hand cook stoves, service tables, side tables, linoleum. .-
' Wanted Every kind of second hand house furnishings. I will pay highest prices in
famous Peninsular steel range in exchange, and will pay extra prices in trade on anything
furniture, ranges and in fact anything I carry in modern house furnishing goods.
G1 II
.... 35
...". . v $1,45
gai ineill J,V
$1.95 $2.20
60 70 85 98
49 65 85
$1.25 $1.45 81.65
$1.65
10 12 1-2
1KA
: 39c45d
49 79 98
25
5
, RUNAWAY JUNE
J,t,llIl,lf,,ItJ,4l,i,i
(Continued from' Page 2.)
eager Interest In the bnutifnl portrait
of Juno Warner, which presently peer
ed Mp at her from inside the lid of
June's little gold wAtcb.
.. When Tommy rejoined the men In
the brilliantly lighted limousine she
banded Blye June's watch with a tri
umphant latigh. .
CHAPTER II.
or
UN E, busy with- ber own
thoughts, did not noUce the
closed cab which stood at the
Comers ' tho next ' morning as
she left the house. As she passed by,
. however, walking briskly up to tbe
surface cur, OHtcer Mack,, who bad
been watching tbut cab and tbe hand
some brunette whose vivacious face
'bad occasionally appeared at the win
dows, saw the cab start and slowly
move away. .
June had stepped from her uptown car
. Fairbanks Morse & Co.
Byron Jackson Pumps
' : Oakland Automobiles
J. J. QU1NLAND CO. lac.
Salesroom & Shops
Island CHj,
Oregon.
Ptrone Black 1392
Do HsiiLsteinL
cloeed cab passed her,: turned and
draw up from ibe opposite directkm.
end gloved uand tapped on the window.-
Tommy Thomas, the -girt to
whom Gilbert Blye kid introduced berl
?Whicfc way, pretty maid?" Tom
my'a glowing face protnided from to
door of the cab. '
"To tbe employment oflica, kind
lady." abt laughed, and June exhibited
bar little address slip.
"I'll take you over," offered Tommy'
The two gh-la laughed together aa
they drove away, but at tbe next cof
her Tommy excused herself for a mo
ment and ran Into a drag store to tele
phone. Tommy hurried out and re
turned to her place In the cab with
June, but Mrs. Vlllard, to whom she
bad phoned, remained at the telephone
and called up another number, .v -..v
When June walked Into the Acme
Employment bureau, having chosen a
new one, quite naturally, since the old
one bad aent her to a gambling bouae,
ho found a new address ready for her.
A lady wanted a companion.
Her eye widened with pleasure aa
she saw the beauty of Mrs. Vlllard'a
home. It wns acarcely visible from the
street, aet back of .and below a tangled
profusion of shrubbery and trees. Be
fore it rolled the brojjd. smooth Hud
son. Her timidity , whs set entirely at
rest when In the coiy parlor Just back
of tbe stiff drawing room she met tbe
kindly faced Mra. Vlllurd.
.'. Companion) She was not to be a
companion1 to this charming and sweet
and yet sometime and lady. She was
to be a friend, n sister, a daughter.
Tbey knew tbat much In t be first three
minutes of their conversation, and then
Mrs. Vlllard took June up to n wonder
ful bedroom which bad once been a
ill P T 5 10 ' wer?
peacocks and roosters and gnomes and
elves. It whs visiting day among the
Vlllard cottages and the cottages be
yond which were not Vlllard cottages,
and June hud the joy once more of giv
ing, mingled with tbe sorrow that there
was need.
U was lute when they arrived at the
cottage of the Groggs. nnd as tbey en
tered the front door Mr. Grogg came
up from the lower road and entered the
buck door, fully ten feet behind bis
breath.- Ho was a red fuced man with
lio blend In his countenance whatso,,
ever. ' Nose, ears and all, he was .the
same tint of red from where bis neck
rose .out of Its sprawling collar to
where his low forehead disappeared In
his Bprawling yellow hair.
"D'afternoon, ladles," observed Mr.
Grogg cheerfully and bowedbls smile
in the direction of the severe eyed Mrs..
Vlllard aud the shocked June. "Brought
you a llttlo present, Lour " and, with
as much extravagant Importance as If
this had been the rajah's jewel, be be
stowed on Mrs. Grogg tbe potted token
of his thougutfuliioxg, a geranium in n
papier maclie pot. .
Mrs. Grogg was a tblu woman, chiefly
distinguished for drooplness and hoi-
lowness as viewed from almost any di
rection. 1
: "Al" the woman's voice concealed a
tremor "can we pay Mrs. Vlllard any
thing on the rent today?"
- "Ain't you got any money?" -.
: "Why, Al, you didn't give me any
money."
The man searched uustcadlly through
all his pockets.'; He finally discovered a
half dollar and a dime. -.
"Never nilud," broke In the soft voice
of Mrs. Vlllard as she saw tears In the
eyes of Mrs. Grogg.
Mrs. Vlllard, who had come to know
life In many sordid phases, took June
away.
"Have you an evening gown, June,
dear?" asked Mrs. Vlllard in a matter
of fact sort of way und eying June
solicitously as she made this abrupt
change In their subject of thought
"Yes."drawled June. "I'll get ttv to
morrow." -
"We are to have guests this evening."
And Mrs. Vlllard studied June's height
and figure with a calculating eye. "I
have ft new little dinner dress which I
am sure you can wear charmingly. You
re to be my family, my dear," she rat
tled on to cover June's embarrassed
half protests. "I want you everywhere
with me. We shall have to do some
shopping, you .and I, one of these days.
You like pretty things, don't you?" .
"Why, of course," laughed June, and
WANTED!
Of Second Hand Furniture
ah colored under MriTVltfard's ob
Vlous admiration, 1
"Then you akill bar tbem. My,
What a pleasure It will h tA .
i dolly out of you, child! must nm
light up nnd dress." j
- The new little lace dluner ftock did
become June charmingly, bat she was
very thoughtful ns she sat among tbe
gay peacocks and elves and gnomes,
very thoughtful and very wad, upon
the tiny bench In front of the Windows
overlooking the broad river. Her brain
was seething with new Ideas, know!
edge which bud been thrust upon her,
sympathies which tugged and pulled
at her.
Flint Mrs. Grogg. Juue had fenred
for that forlorn wotnau. feared for her
at this moment, alone down there with
that animal, who bad fallen so far
from the Image of God. Yet what waa
there to fear? Mrs. Grogg had en
dured and was enduring now and
would eudure again, and when her
lord and master luippeued to be sober
and' happened to, have any money he
might give his wife a little of It, might
take compassion on her dire poverty
and her need. The geraniums proved
that he bnd a trace pf the quality con
oealed In him. It was tho sume old
problem, June's own problem, only In
Its most sordid form. Dear Ned! There
was no comparison, yet It was always
tbe man who owned, the man wbo
gave. The woman could onfjr receive.
She could not giro becauso the man
possessing her already owned all that
she had to offer, even her love. .?
On the corner of Vender street and
Duck alley was Ned, Interviewing a
skinny legged girl who sniffled continu
ously, both while she whs pulling up
her stockings mid' while she waa not
In her check was a wad of iruui, nnd In
' W eye was all the lively expression
found in the eye of u dead tisb. Ned
Warner dredged for Information for
two sordid mlnutcftfcatid went away,
and Officer Tlcrinau walked straight
over to tbe stocking puller, :v.
"What did that guy want?" he de
manded "He was astin' about a girl."
' "This party described the girl, didn't
he?"
j ''Uh-hiinh sawed oB ' blond. Say.
what is It to you?"- And she sniffled
away.
Officer Tlermun walked hack to hla
post with a troubled brow, and he
shook his long, narrow head hh he
looked after the Industrious NcJ War
ner. - (Continued Tomorrow)
. . ii iitiuniit iiiiiii,ihiiii,ihii
DRINK HOT TEA
FOR A BAD COLD
9.......,w,.t.4".M..i,.a.-4.4i4H4
Get a small package o! Hamburg
l!rrunt Tea, or as the German folks
call it, "Hamburger Brust Thee," at any
pliaramcy, 'fake a tnblespoonful of the
tea, put a cup of boiling water upon
it pour through a sieve and drink a
teacup full -at any time during the
day or before retiring. It is the most
effective way to break a cold and cure
grip,, as. it opens the pores of the skin,
relieving congestion. . Also loosens the
bowels, thus driving a cold from the
system.
Try it the next time you suffer from
a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive
and entirely vegetable, therefore, safe
and harmless.
RUB BACKACHE AND
LUMBAGO RIGHT OUT
Rub Pais ud StUfiMM away with
- a small bottle of old honest
St Jacobs Oil
When your back is . sore and . lame
or lumbago, sciatic or rheumatism haa
you stiffened up,' don't suffer! . Get a,
25 cent bottle of old, honest "St
Jacobs Oil" at any drug store, pour, a
little in your hand and rub it right
into the pain or ache, and by the time
you count fifty,' the soreness and lame'
neae is gone.
Don't stay crippled I This soothing,
penetrating oil needs to be used only
once. It takes the ache and pain Tight
out of your back and ends the misery.
It is magical, yet absolutely harmless
and doesn't burn the skin.
Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica
and lame back misery so promptly! :
cash for 20 second hand cast
you have to exchange. I will
Uctcd Sfctci n-l:::: : :
LA GRAK22, O.ILCC::
A FEW FACTS FOR
YOUR CONSIDFaRATIOIJ
: First. That systematic
15.00 a month for five years, with 4 per cent interest
computed semi-annually, will yield you 1332.27. Tea
dollars a month for the same length of time will yield
1664.60, while in ten years you would have $1,474.76.
Second. -.The safety of your money. The well known
character and ability of our board of directors is a suf
ficient guarantee of honest and capable management
. Third. . That we take any amount from $1.00 upwards.
Fourth. That your money is payable on demand. '
Fifth. That we pay 4 per cent interest on Certificates
of Deposit and Saving accounts, crediting the interest on
the Savings accounts on the first day of January and
July in each yearf , -
Sixth. That we extend to our patrons every courtesy
and accommodation in our power consistent with good
banking, and , . .
Seventh. . That we are under Government inspection.
We respectfully solicit your business,
T. J. SCROGGIN, Cashier.
Should not Feel Discouraged.
So manv neonle troubled with in.
digestion ana constipation have beer,
benefited by taking Chamberlain s
Tablets that no one should feel dia-couraged-
who has not given them a
trail. They -: contain no pepsin or
other digestive ferments but strength
en the stomach and enable it to per
form its functions naturally. Obtain
able anywhere.
- Splendid ' For Rheumatism.
."I think Chamberlain's Liniment is
iust splendid for rheumatism." writes
Irs. Dunburgh, Ektridge, N. Y. "It
haa been used by myself and other
members of . the ' family, time
and . again during the . past r aix
years a'nd has always given the best
of satisfaction." - The quick relief
from pain which Chamberlain's Lin
iment affords is alone worth many
times the -cost. Obtainable every
where. ';:.:.
Fresh Supply of
Lemps St. Louis Beer
Bock & Pols
on
Draught and Bottles
at the
THE L0TTES BAR
1118 Jefferson Ave.
WAN
ft. V 7? ;
.f ' - T
"TT , " T"""
cook stoves. Small ones preferred. I will trpde yoU the ' ''
make you Special Prices and terms if desired on any new ;
FURNITURE ON EASY
PAYMENTS
saving pays. A deposit of
' E. RIESLAND, ,
I Plasterer and Contraetor. ;
Cement wrk of all kinds, Feu-
dations and Fine construction.
Cement block a specialty. Call
and see these blocks at E. C
Davit' Marble Shop, Phoae Bed
871.
TaRU L0MIS
Reasonable ffafes
i
SECURITY UND O SAVINGS
j COMPANY
J la Gnnde, Oregon.
D!
At Once
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