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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1916)
T" TUESDAY. JUNE 13, 1916. LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER IPAGI FOUR THE LAST DAY BROKEN DOWN ARCH OF THE FREE DEMONSTRATION BY A CELEBRATED CHICAGO FOOT SPECIALIST OF SCHOLL'S FOOT , COMFORT SERVICE AT OUR STORE. IF YOU HAVE ANY FOOT TROUBLE, IF YOUR FEET ACHE OR PAIN, IF YOU TIRE EASILY, IF YOU HAVE ANY FOOT DEFORMITY, CONSULT HIM. THERE WELL BE NO CHARGE. FOR MS SERVICES NOR WILL YOU BE OBLIGED TO PURCHASE YOUR SHOES HERE. CRAMPED AND CONTRACTED OR HAMMER TOES com IAIMU VT' V , BUM I ON This Is For Your Benefit Take Advantage of this Specialist's Free Advice No matter what your foot troubles may be, no mat ter wbat remedies you may have tried, no matter how hard you have sought to get relief, you can come .to. this store, knowing that your foot troubles are at an end. Even if you (bJave been wearing arch supports come in and show your feet to the foot specialist. The Reason for the Demonstration - This new feature is an added service for our cus tomers and to people, who have experienced difficulty in being fitted, or whose feet have been tortured, in order to bring relief to all foot suffei'ers. Our salesmen have been under special training, not only in fitting foot gear, but also in the proper methods of correction of foot 'ailments by Dr. SchoU's appli ances. ' We aim to have this store known as the store in town where perfect foot comfort .service can be obtained. Henceforth This Store Will Give Customers Dr. SchoU's Foot V Comfort Service There is a Scholl Appliance for Every Foot Ailment or Deformity Broken Down Arch. SchoU's Tri-Spring Arch Support corrects even the severe cases of flat foot. , . Cramped Toes, Hammer Toes. SchoU's Foot-Kaze properly fitted holds up arch prevents this crowding forward and cramping toes. SchoU's Hammer Toe Spring for hammer toes. Corns. Scholia Obsorbo Corn Pads a shape and eizo for each toe. SchoU's Fixo Corn Plaster, medicated, removes corns in 48 hours. Over and Underlnpping Toes SchoU's Toe-Flex prevents this by holding toes straight. Weak Ankle. SchoU's Foot Eazer firmly holds up the weakened ankle by supporting the arch cor rectly. , For Children or Adults. Extreme High Insteps SchoU's Tri-Spring Arch Support is fitted to equalize and distribute the weight. Takes pressure off the ball and makes shoes fit better. Severe Bunions. SchoU's Bunion Right to help flex the toe. SchoU's Bunion Spring acts as a lever to straighten. SchoU's Bunion Reducer, a shield of antiseptic rubber to take off pressure and reduce enlarged bunion joint. Callous on the Sole. SchoU's Anterior Metatarsal Arch Support holds up transvere Arch relieves callouses, Metatarsalogia and Morton's Toe. Absorb Callous Pads relieve pressure. fl l. OVER. AMD UA!DE5jlLAPP!JG TOES I V y i l X X X WEAK AM KLi St x t: ? : . 1 1. ... . 1 -,i u- i CALLOUSES W X. ON SOLE liHZk - cS & 'X-rr SEVER XImJ'I THE OBSERVER BRUCE DENNIS. Editor and Owner Entered in the Postofllce at La Grande, Oregon, as second class matter. yer after year until the one held in Juno, 1915 wns one of the bost exhibi tions of the kind ever given in iht Northwest. Uvon, as most renders of The Ore gei :i know, is situated in the won der Grande Hondo valley, in Union county. Tli.it valley is ono of th ilioicpst agricultural sections of the Northwest, and at this season of t'r. SLHSCKll'llON KATES. Daily, single copy ; 5c Daily, per week lic Daily, nor month ti.'x; Daily, per six months in advance SU.fn) yei'.r it is well worth a trip from the Daily, per year in advance ... . $7.00 , Willamette valley to tea tho full use Oruly, by mad per year, in ad-J ,the ownors nre milk,n(? of their hlIU; vanoe ... , Weekly Observer-Star, per year j 011 pnictically nil of the three or four in advance fl.CO htimlred square miles of territory e:v- I braced in the valley. There one w ill Advertising rates on application. All se; some of the best equipped 11:; ! copy for display advertising must best kept farms In OrcRon, owned ami tilt: t'lmti Liio ii.ij lilt; ;nl nnnp;irw. K-iKLiinsf-; ana irint NOT SUCH A BAD NAVY. After having been tcld so often by Navy Leaguers and other believers in senredness that our navy is a j'tnk pile, it is interesting to road the sta tistics which have twen presented to the house committee on naval affairs, showing that our sea forces may pre- ; sent a very good claim to second place m world armament. To strengthen our hold on that pb.ee, we need battle cruisers, and these the hou?e seems ready to pro vide. In battleships we seem to be as powerful ns Germany, with an even nioie effective broadside rmd with a much greater bunkor capaoitv, givinir !V the states most m'oh:. ; a. pro . tor steaming radius. As at the arguments of the militarists Congress seems in a liberal mood, and it looks as if the private navy yards would get the contracts for which they have been longing. FIXING THE BLAME. Addrer.s all communication to 'THE OUtiERVEU, 171J Sixth Street. LIVE STOCK SHOW AT UNION (Poi'tUnd Oiogonian.) Tiio eighth annual live stock show will Ve held nt Union this week, op.n- eneratcd irent nr era. Speak in;; of fruit reminds u that the Grande Hondo fruits are ;i fine as nro ra'ucd in the Weft a-vl , tlint tl.c growers of that section arc I ex.- rdin(;ly prosperous, j A3 to tho stock exhibits at the rora ' ing thow in tho eastern rart of the valley, at Union, it only iKvd be saai that 11 ,ay of the be.-,t stockbreeder.; in With the futility of the great war becoming apparent to all the belliger ents, the attempt is renewed to fix the responsibility. Complete success in this task will probably cludo con temporary judges; the final verdict find the origin of the war in the in tense materialism and individualism of tho nations previous to Aug. 1914. Such an attitude of mind, say they, could not eventuate otherwise than in war. The world-war is a concreto expression of world-sin. It had to come, these aver, to shock tho nations out of tho tense selfishness and separ ateness which was ruining their be?t moral tendencies. Others, those of socialistic trend, lay the blame for war on the system of capitalism which prevails in all will be pronounced by the clispas- j countries, with its consequent inftu sionate historian. But it is an ex- cnco upna government, and its intonsv ceiain sign ma-, tne idea 01 respons- desire tc secure the markets of liu.hy win not down, borne person, wor!d for the benefit of some class, some condition separate- I p-i-nrnq f men -must bear the onus nip lueci.ty ana closing rrwny, run tne west rcsi.tc nna 00 nusnicsj in the directors cxpf .t to ive a larger Union court;., and in tl.o- Towdir and rural or of entries an;! r. Vtter .ass other valleys, adjacent in Baker co.ia- of r.Jock on exhibition 1 l:: r. any of ty, and that ns fmo n lot of stoc!: as their former rhows hnv,j had. Thai is over brought io,r-rthar at any sliuw is saying a good real, for tho show! in tho state no doubt will be Hhown tiavo been getting better and better there this week. thc ! l.v 0.' combined smipoi-.ison is that (..evmany mi-ht at-iot tats wholesale wastage of life and i through every detail of the matter, tack usovon the colonel King on j the material means of life; and it is I fixing" t,e bame 10r0 nml t;lc,C-' reoord as opposed to an offenr.iv.'i warja cheering evidence that tl'e world' ; yone of tteal aro whclly right; none t'.'.o latter asset is one of extreme j moral sc.se has not been stunned by I 0f hem nre wholly wrong. When a lirij-nvtar.ee. Gormany has no coiling the catastrophe, that this idea rf LVorld is sirk it i ; r,i 0.- m!1 over nnd moral rcpor.sibility looms so lares in . f ron; many C,I!:(. , au 0f wla.icli, how recent European discrssion. Uvcr, bear definite relation each to There rre strong int!ividals who . the other. Individuals ao rcponsi-seei- to lay the blame on certain eie- j ;,;0; ana systems, too, nre responsible, vr.'.e.l individuals. Trey make out a m .nt.f-oo. Arl tn Ut.in Eight Thousand Doctors in Parade Detroit, Mich., June 13. Marking tho close of the American Medical as sociation's 67th annual convention, Detroit today will celebrate "Public Health Day," with some 8,000 visit ing physicians participating in the ceremonies. The feature of the ihv will be a public health parade, in which banners on more than a hun dred gigantic floats will preach the doctrine of right living. The parade, which is to be one of tho most novel ever seen here, will be staged under the direction of the state board of health, cooperating with officers of the American Medical association. Of the various floats, 12 will be furnished by Detroit women's clubs, nine by the city recreation commission. 13 W fh certain 'f-" , V '"-un- m"e ny tne An I ti-1 uticrcu.osis society and five by medical cnllno-ns Thus do the blame-seekers lile " '. so the . near the L :.;Hu MnVs coa.-r. 1 Kocaidin;; smaller -rf', statistics are unreliable. Germany n-.ay have ;!t a sreat many destroyers and s' 'm: "ines since the war bejan. Tli'-v c -r, be turned out in a fraction of th- fane it costs to build a dirad- jning of every cntovpri.-e, pood or bad. 1 div:-l,in3 of our comir 1 V rotig!?. uur p.esent force is far 1 there w individual initiative. Va- from irsignificant, and n ay be equal Jonbtedly this war would have been to Gen nr.y's. Tiicre is nothing in there statistics to justify our becoming panic stricken New Roundhouse at Huntington. Huntington, June 12. The con tract for the construction of a $10. flOO roundhouse for the O.-W. R. & N. company at Huntington has been awarded to the M. J. Hursen company or Seattle. The structure is tj be one story, of brick and concrete con struction, and will provide ten 25-foot t-ills and r-.o 28-foot stalls. The channel of Burnt river will have to be changed in order to make good case, cf co-.irsc. At the begin j so wi(0 a trail cf blame through aij i ground j-pn-o for the addition three j;"ie.-i (pl in:inye, unti worx on tn.19 we may , improvement ia to Vo iln i,,r!nn n,! be p.o-iarirg frr as wi plan of '-.cnlh. remedy. Ons thing is vt.y do:":.it?;l Arothrr imprnr?ri'i t; pf t!d!nes. vill ing the cinder paths now in vogue. utterly prevent 1 if certain individ--;f t-nP v.0-id had nnv vestitri 1 illu3ionfor4i,hi;'h the "ni0H ' ''' r'wn, ur.Is had been so minded. about war, they have nil been swept lie ihS- ''"f,1' concrete walks Then there are the moralists who away. LTfe "I