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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 1916)
page two LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER TUESDAY, APIUL 18, 1916. 4 ,4 Make Hill's Store Your Easter Store The safest and easiest solution for all your Easter Buying. EASTER COATS EASTER SUITS Priced from $6.50 to $14-85 Priced from $12.50 to $31.50 EASTER SKIRTS ' . EASTER WAISTS Priced from $2.48 to $12.48 Priced from 59c to $3.48 Easter Gloves Easter Neckwear Easter Petticoats EASTER MILLINERY EASTER MILLINERY Everything the latest and in great variety. 4 MEN'S EASTER SUITS MEN'S EASTER HATS Priced from $13.50 to $27.50 Good values at $3.00 BOYS' EASTER SUITS BOYS' EASTER HATS Priced from $2.69 to $7.50 . Priced as low as 50c : 1 ; ; . ; J ' If you want to save money on your shoes come here tobuy. Hill S D epanmesi Store AT THE MOVIES LAST DAY AT SHERRY'S. , there are times when it comes closer i to punishment tfoan labor to enact the Realistic and Rugged Filming. (scenes motion picture directors call ;or in some instances. In one of the The life of a film actor is all very j scenes of "Secret Love," to 'be pre fine when "the aoing is good," but sented at the Sherry theatre today i. fit jf'H" HI H ' It this condition obtains to a dejrree that must have made the original work of enacting one of the incidents painful as well as hazardous. ; Upon the top of a rock, apparently about fifty feet hiffh, two men fight, fall, wre.Je anil roll about in a des perate encounter. If one recalls how painful it is to snip a piece of skin from some part of the body when it comes suddenly in contact with some ijapsred object, imagination may ro i farther in trying to realize the physi cal pain that would follow the con tact of almost every part of the leg", I arms and body in a struggle of most . realistic qualities on top of a rock. This scene in "Rwret T.w" nb , several moments to pass on the screen. ine amount of rehearsal that must have been required to perfect the work may only be imagined for in settine the last vest-i iro nf "off.t from the various sensational scenes in j the film, the picture that is finally I shown upon the screen may have been j "taken;" over and over again, j There are other sensations in i "Secret Love," the scene in a coal jmine, terminating in an explosion; i one of the most realistic encounters, I man to man, in a desperate fist figiht j to a finish and other acts of vivid j realism. But it is not "sensation" I alone that is depended upon to bring '"Secret Love" to great popularity I the titJe of the film (?ives an inkling i of its motive, and the "secret" par: I of the love, shared by three coupiis, j intensifies the effectiveness of the parded between sensations. Ijist day j I totiay. Ann Murdock in "A Royal Family" at Sherry's tomorrow Only. GPBRnTHFR5 JJOD s The Quality Car The Difference between a $2000 car and a Dodge Brothers Car is quantity not quality. SMITH'S GARAGE Distributors AT ARCADE. "The Coward" Big Film Play. Once in a lustrum or a decade comes a play fashioned according to the classic model of great characters, straightforward unity of plot, terrific emotional power, tru'h to life and art. Such, say many who have seen it in New York, Chicago and Phila delphia, is Thomas H. Ince's new civil war play "The Coward," starring Frank Keenan. It will be seen in the Triangle program at the Arcnde on Wednesday and Thursday and it has undoubtedly excited greater interest than any other recent ofTering wheth er in the film or the regular stage , world. j The scenes of "The Cownrd" are I lnid in the Valley of Virginia in 1861. The story is that of a prideful father, and a weak, timid son of the Hamlet like type. Needless to sny, Mr. Keen an appears in the role of the arrogant and domineering father, the wonder fully sincere young actor, Charles jRay, as the son. Gertrude Claire as the mother and Margaret Gibson as tne hoy s sweetheart. Other charac ters include the Confederate general, played hy Charles K. French, and a couple of old negro servants. "Fickle Fatty's Fall." Round, jovial Roscoe Arbuckle gos a comreninl role in "Fickle Fatty's Fall," the Ti-iancle comic plnv due at the Arcade Wednesday and Thursday. His hosts of admirers in previous Keystone plays will welcome with joy his Appearance in this new comedy, which shows him in amusing compli cations with a wife and mother-in-law. Tins is a snlashinar, dashing convc I picture of life en the coast, full of div- ing and swimmi-c and rescues of men and women who have been hdrled into I the water by runaway autos. Read This Iw. teunrM "Do you know that when vou write j a check, or any paper that is to cir jculute us money, for less than ?1, you are laying yourself liable to a fine of $500 and improsonment up to six months in jail under tne United States laws? "Though there is a law against writing a check for less than $1 it is done hundreds of times each day in the business world. "Under the title of 'Offenses against the currency, coinage, etc.. Section 178 Criminal Code of the United States, the law relative to checks is made very plain. 'Section 178 is a follows: "No person shall make, issue, cir culate or pay out any note, check, memorandum, token, or other obliga tion for a less sum than $1 intended to circulate as money, or. to be re ceived, or used in lieu of lawful money of the United States; and every person so offending shall be fined not more than $500, or imprisoned not more than six months, or both." Ex. wmmm BOOST Boost for every forward move ment, f Boost for every new improve ment. Boost t!be man for whom you labor. Boost the stranger and the neighbor; Cease to be a chronic knocker, Cease to be a progress blocker, If you'd make your city better, Boost it to the final letter. It -is as plain as one and one: To hold the patronage and good will of your customers you must please them, and the surest way to please them is to give service and prompt at tention to every detail. This we endeavor to do to the very best of our ability. SAWYER-CLARK COMPANY, Phone Main 17. Corner Jefferson & Greenwood Streets. . BSSEBBRESBMBi fill "The Ventilo Back," an ex clusive feature of ft srs , .fin a lj m it ji is ii V IIW V w tol TrnJo Maik. 0. 8. Pat. dan No pressure of steels on the spine. The corset for every oc casion. Spring models bring new comfort, new - beauty, new styles. Have your Easter gown fit. ted over a La Camllle and note the difference. i i MRS. ROBERT PATTISON !i CORSETIERE. j Other models at $2.00 up. Residence 1702 Oak Phone Red 3221 t ! I I NO! We are not just keepin store We are SELLING GROCERIES - . That's what our clerks are paid for Just watch 'em move HARRIS GROCERY PHONE MAIN 70 v FARMERS PHONE B 1 92 408 North Fir Street, Cross Track CHINESE ROOT AND HERB REMEDIES jjjl : MM&m Cures Bodily Diseases With Root and Herb Treatment. Free Consultation -UM Phone 762 1412 Adams Ave. La Grande lSMl Ore. SzMmiib. f BON TON RESTAURANT 213 FIR STREET PHONE RED 1241 Expert Chef, American and Chinese Dishes Noodles and Chop Suey a Specialty OPEN AT 6 A. M. TO 1 A. M. Furnished rooms up stairs Wong Dan, Prop. THERE ARE MANY REASONS WHY EVERY HOME IN LA GRANDE SHOULD HAVE ELECTRIC LIGHT. Eastern Oregon Light & Power Co. Always at Your Service; Telephone Main 34 IT'S AN INDIAN BICYCLERS AMun you buy an IX I) TAX BICYCLE you have bought some more than an a t tract iv civ painted frame. What vou have done is made an investment in SERVICE, in CONSTRUCTION, in an assembling of metal of great strength and durability with a painted finish that will stand up and wear as no other RICYCLK will do, and then the price? $27.50, for the INDIAN ROADSTER Call and I will show you the BEST inICYCLES and the terms are so easy that ou cannot afford to be without an INDIAN this summer. Let me re-tire your wheel, with the famous PENNSYLVANIA VACUUM CUP TIRES, the f000 miles quality tires, cost no more and gives double the service. F. D. HAISTEN, V