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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1916)
TAOE SIX LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER MONDAY, MAY 29, 1916. THE OBSERVER BRUCK DENNIS. Editor and Owner Entered in the Postoflice at La Grande, Oregon, us second class matter. SUHSCICUTION KATES. Daily, single copy 5c Daily, per week 16c Daily, per month (JDe Daily, per six months in advance $3.50 Daily, per year in advance .... $7.00 Daily, by mail per year, in ad- - vnnce $4.C0 Weekly Observcr-Stur, per year in advance $1.D0 . Advertising rates on application. All copy for display advertising must reach tho oflke the day before the i ad appears. Address all communications to THE OBSERVER, 1710 Sixth Street. ENTHKPWSE. with every device that apparently is needed to handle logs and handle them very rapidly. When ons stands ! in the center of the mill high ud in tho rigging he looks down on two "shot-gun feeds" shooting logs under the saw as fust as steam will do it Then the hoards coming from the saws are carried automatically around over tho mill, separated into classes. the edgings and offal is carried off on endless chain carriers, and finally the good lumber is sent up an incline where a man with a bouquet of small buzzsaws cuts it into proper lengthj and sends it into the yard to be piled and dried, or into the dry kilns for speedier work. It is no longer guc.-HWork regarding Enterprise. She is coming and coming fust. Kight now houses cannot be rented for the supply is inadequate. Hotel accommodations are limited, and if you intend to stay any length of time in the neighboring county seat we would advise you to wire Mrs. Rogers to hold you a room? "What did it? Why the transforma tion? It is easily answered. The George Palmer Lumber company, the Grande Konde Lumber company and O.-W. !I. & N. company transformed La Grande with their pay rolls. Pay rolls are doing the same thing to Enterprise. Some place in the middle west, we believe it is Kansas City, there lives a man named Duvnll Jackson who nibbled at timber in the Wallowa county section for several years, and his friends nibbled. They kept getting more and more invested and it kept looking better and better to the.ni. Finally th inevitable happened. Tho timber was getting ripe and Du vnll Jackson realized he hud to get , action for a nian livjs but once and he doesn't live very long at that. So, The day' the writer "was in Enter prise this mill cut 122,000 feet of lumber. This was not indicated, as I t'uey say about horse power of a gas I oline engine, but actual. That much j lumber was shuped from the Wallowa county forests and placed on the mar ket of the world to reach out after money which Wallowa county an I Enterprise would have never seen had it not been for the saw mill. The effect of this pay roll is appar ent on every hand. The town is glowing. There are new faces on the sheets all the time. People have heard of the "pep" in Enterprise and are (locking in. Some are the Easy money guys who expect to pick off a little of the velvet and move on, but there is a large percentage who enter Enterprise that can be called good, substantial people looking for a loca tion. For this reason Enterprise is doubling herself in population just about as fast as the rules of the busi ness game will permit. And to the credit of. Archie Miller, Dan Boyd, Frank Clarke and a lot more of the "sovereign squats" who went there in an earlier day, they are taking care of all who come. Not bilking them with some scheme to get their money, hut they are finding profitable employ ment and profitable business for the men who are worth while. 1 jkj "" 0,,',-t, fllS? Jm l l 1 Willi ilHIWMUllllllll Do Your Shopping at Our Store Before 10:30 To-morrow Morning On account of Decoration Day our store will close at 10:30 Tuesday, May 30 and remain closed the rest of the day. l ness are dispelled often by the clouds.. ', should not feel a little "chesty" and and the lumber business is no excep tion to the .rule." This remark was made just after he had 1,-een informed the logging road had spread in a soft place out in the hills and he had a locomotive and three curs to dig out before any more logs could be delivered. hegin to take on a brisk life with such an institution as the one described running on full time? Hot Lunch Service Plun for School Molalla, Or., May 215. The Mo lalla Parent-Teachers' association has voted in favor of establishing- a hnt iuncn service in the public schools, t.n t.n a;nA ! .-j. ningements having been made by the provincial government for financing the operations, the Pacific Great Eastern railway plans to at once re sume construction on its line north of Clinto, the piesent rail head, 10(5 miles from Squamish, the Howe Sound terminal. The railway, which was begun three years ago, will run from Vancouver ito Fort George and furnish an important north 'and The East Oregon Lumber company has come to stay. It has twenty to get tho money out of the standing years supply of standinir timber and timber it was necessary to start the has a mill that it could not move pur ui uic saw inui in ine Wallowa away il it wanted to, and it does not i canyons. And to do this il was ncces- want to. From W. C. Jackson, who ' J build a logging railroad out is a son of Ihivall Jackson, and the ' . . e timber and to do many other man who does the buying for the thmt have been done and d- -ompany, we learned a lot about lum en. ' . WO,.,- l.ncinpws. WblIl il l"ic nn.ilt. John H. Pollit is superintendent of the new mill. He hails from down south where the magnolias bloom and where mosquitos and black folks op erate in the winter as well as in the summer. He was very frank in telling the writer that he had never heard tell, much less experienced such a winter as we have just had in East ern Oregon. But, after mentioning several of the worst days, reciting the the new I. (). O. tabulated statement of the ther- "' a fev days. mometer readings during the winter and offering substantiated statements regarding tho snow fall, he said: "And with ii II n,.,t .. 1, I I ...v.. .... v.iuv ...... I. juu IVIIU.Y j like it up here fine and we whipped I that mill on the tail and made her y.i d i work all winter long." It was not hard to understand the latter statement. To look at John j wiui. js -imt 10 survey a man with a lot of iron in him and one who knows no such word as failure. Ell .nrVrJEJr rfT "th nk with the- transcontenental .... . ....i. j-ifc fllU llltMJLlIlif or uie rurent- leafcheuis' association officers were elected for the ensuing year tas follows: President. Mi-s .1 W. Thomas; Vice-President, Mrs. V. G. Haveman; treasurer, Mrs. George Case; secretary, Mrs. J. L. Tuley. Molalla I. O. O. F. To Build Home system of the Grarnd Trunk Pacific railway, opening rich tracts of agri cCkural, mining and timber lands. Knipolymont .will be given to 1300 men, station-men, carpenters, me chanics and track laborers being inquired. Ifolslein Cows Shipped ' i"m Mii-mn uiey , e uiiwn ui a point wnere we could They said to Mr. Jackson "wo grasp it, the situation appears to be t been here .since Chief Jo.-cph very simple. It is this: Manuf actur- fen out of this country for ing lumber bears, no earmarks of a M'e h:ve some coin of 'be get-rich-quirk game. It is a business , l-esum laid by, and to uhow you we be- with a percentage profit when things liove in our own resources and also ' work well and a percentage of loss believe in your judgment we will in- when things do not work well. But vest a bunch of money along with you keep in mind, it is a business nws and take the chance." ' Kit rily of long duration to achieve re- The deal was made and work began, suits. Quite naturally it is a business HUT IT ilia ni-ni,...!.,. ... M. - I f ... -" .". !'" ' iui rim.Muer- u large proportions lor the interest I "nr. lived m Wallowa county long nhle rapidity is. best known when one 'on the investment in timber and mill 'enough yet to get over the scenerv'. " lnt '"TO"'.'? "" reaching toward would stagger a mmi who has run a i To him nature's work over there is Flora and on that road is running a count: y print shop for many yean, i the best of nil and he can prove to , M "'lives iii-inirmg Nevertheless, while the bet is a big I you without exaggeration that the in uiiiimuiu .niei iriutiload ol logs to ; one, if conditions continue as they are I Alps are nothing but make-believe mi. i.Miiy pi iM. nun. i now the returns are bound to be lai-ge. j mountains compared with old jne inui is uoseriDod hy a man who , In Mr. Jackson's verv original mnnne -knows as "the lust word in saw mil! be culled the turn when he said, "but construction." It is a double mill fitted the streaks of minshinc in nnv busi- Molalla, Or., May 2(!. It is in- nounced that work will commence on ' I . hall at Molalla ' It will he con- ' hv tlm nifr;.. i...:u: m. V , secietaiT vj j ' .si. uiiuuiiii. i ue ueeu lor the lot has been secured bv the 1 Chehalis. Wash.. Mnv :'fi -flm. hundred head of high-grdo Holstein cows have recently been purchased in this district !bv Nick La France. retary of the Coeur d'Alem- Idaho, Commercial c'ub. the animals local lodge and the nermifc ,--,ntn,l ' l b0..'Vp&i immelialc-ly and to he for moving the postoffice iist.ri mte.l among the dairymen in ... vwl.ui ii nil-UK VUUIllI V. iVJI. IjU Warrant Issued Grand Mound Citizen Centralia, Wash., May 26. Follow ing nn investigation by Prosecuting Attorney Yantis, of Thurston county, a warrant iwas issued Wednesday for the arrest of H. H, Bulch, n prominent mill owner of Grand Mound, on the. charge of aiding girls to escape from the State School fan Girls at Grand Mound und also charging him with in terfering with the discipline of the school. It is alleged that Mr. Baleh assisted Pearl Mann to escape from the school, paying her way to Seattle. Several other residents of Grand Mound are suspected of having had . a hand in the affair. The investiga tion was imade upon the complaint of the state board of control that cer tain Grand Mound people are hos tile to the institution, it 'being their apparent sentiment that the irirls aire badly treated and that they are doing a humane act in assisting- them to get away. Far North Itoad To Be Built Vancouver, B. C, May 2(5. Ar- I Fiance expects to return within a few veck-s to purchase three or four ad ditional carloads of Holstein cattle. Veteran Is Dead at Home lioseburg, Or., May 2(i. James II. Li.wis, nged 8(i, an Indian war vet eran, died yesterday at the Oregon Soldiers' Home. He entered the in stitution 17 years ago from Linn county. He has one nephew at Cot tage Grove. H. LoCaiiton, the assistant secre tary, was chasing his fingers up and down the columns of an adding ma chine but ho stopped long enough to recall a few reminiscences. lie has mL JSl O J ! Cap. Eagle r .-..........J jt, i 1-117 To-day Matinee and Night 4 uic pinner tilling the position of superintendent is K. S. Faucctte. Ac cent on the last syllable of that name, please. And he is the busiest man one ever smv, yet. ho has time to visit with you between or,li.i fr he hns all the boys in their nrcner places and his men work with as much lirof-iuiiiti .1.. 41.- i-..i' . . . , ...... UW! lUL. m.mn mucnine ju that L'l-inds onr. ilu. xvi.i k..,.i- i..., " ...v .'.'Hula nub- tcred on one side or on both. whi, ti. " ever you may elect, Mr. Faucctte i'f smooths up what the other fellows have started. He is tho finisher. Not't ...!.. 41.. .L l.. , . , .... I "...j Him am Ri-fps tao on all the lum ber that goes through. It may bo an inch board or it mnv lm .... four, but it dues not get away from J Faucette. j lt Assistant to him is W. U. La Londe, IM, !W!'V't' . . . .mil. li.J Ji um j . " K t &WW''Ji-.."..-.x3i " " t J i ' i VatiAvJL W-tt it ixuk Acrtrn, dm PICTURE TELlS ITS STORY BETTER THAN GLADLY THIS WORDS. ALL WE WISH TO SAY IS THAT VVF HAVF n rbnk P-SToRR ONEy! WE WLTvELCOEoi: HERE AND TREAT YOU WITH rm m-rrci tLCP.!2-E..X?y ADVISE YOU AND ASSIST "fou. COME IN BANK WITH IIS. WE PAY H PER CENT INTEREST 6'2 rv Money for Improved Farm Loans La Grande National Bank I A (JUAN')!! OliKGON" rZP ui 00'000p0tVS'-pl' ,000.00. Kesourcen ll.MO.OOO.OO i red J. Holme. President: C. C. Peninr-t. v,.. r.' ..- i. r r iieym, Cashier; K Zundcl and II. E. Coolul'gc, Assistant Cashj"ert ' WRECTOIiS ' Frnl J. Holme, J G. Snoilgra-., J. y. Conley, C. C. Penington II ! S. BrowU,n. F. U Mey.r.. A. Bloklnnd. A. T. Hill, H, e! (SoUdji" ! uie gentleman from Mexico. He knows Villa well. Probably drank muscul with tho outlaw around the dinner table, but he does not admit it. He does say however, that Villa, while an outlaw and a man with a price on his head for many years, always treated Americans well in the ram. imunitv where he (Mr. La Undo) was . KH.'iiou. Having cruised a groat deal ijof timber in Mexico Mr. La Londe knows the country well and ho can : give f.imc graphic descriptions of tho 1 1 land south of the Kio Grande. 1 1 i Jil I IV: The .'.lit t c;. pacify of this industrial at is putting Knterprise on thc 1L'.",H10 foct il.iilv. A!. out four are 7 W : i-f ma-iiifactiired liiin'i I- -. oc-ng shippeil from tiie mill, . wM.-h in u start for Hggcr business. T!io pVvi. as we have stated, is thoroughly modern. It has its mm clccti ic plant with motive power from'"'' " steam turbine. It i..:s n large tim- j S anl the log'.-ing ro: 1 now "i used will eventually tic b-illi-fn,! ' Jti. - ui ..mi- iiuu u r ninion f rr.r. .. i x 1 .. . jcrv,. (tie arriculfui.il cm.:;) -. r,..i "Mil umi uie nt county, Is there any reason why Enterprise being .-t:i ludf of 'Wuilowa Your Children, Your Children's Children :md Yum- Children's (Jre,t (!,,tnd Chiidre n Will Head It lnlI.st.orv BUT Yon ';tn See 1( ow INACTION As It U-alIy is Takinc I'la.-e iii Tin: Crand lieview of "THE WAR IN EUROPE" Presented by The Williams Feature Film Company. t . : ; , ; t $ . v t . t J