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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1917)
TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1917. PAGE TWO LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER ,4 i ft 5 -51 It is our aim to Tnake this a J) pr cent store, reim cring 100 per cent service ami 10O per cent satisfa tion to to onr customers Always! That is why we stand side by side with A. B. Kirschbaum Co. Of Philadelphia upon their famous CLOTHES-MAKING PLATFORM All W60I 100 Per Cent And No Compromise For no man ever got 100 per cent satisfaction from a suit or overcoat with an adulteration of cotton in it. Hospital Notes Charlie Murchison is very much im proved. Mrs. Charles Taal, opeiated upon last week for appendicitis, is rapidly training strength. Miss Frieda Graham of Elgin was returned to her homo Sunday morn ing. Miss Viola Dunham was taken to her home Sunday morning. SHERRY'S t V j stock company. Three years I Savage productions. "Mary ! I Coming- to the Sherry theater to day and tomorrow in the Bluebird fea ture, "The Price of Silence," U Doro thy Phillips, one of the most beauti ful and talented of screen stars. Miss Phillips is a Baltimore girl and it was 111 Baltimore tnat sne mane ner iirst 1 stage appearance in G;orge Fawcett's in the vage productions. Mary janes Pa" and "Everywoman followed, and I she created the title role in the New IVnrk nroduction of "Pilate's Dauph in I ter." For one season she played op ffr Iposite Francis X. Bushman at t!. s ,i isanpy company, and two years ago be- Icame a member of the Universal com pany. Joseph De Grasse, Who has taken Miss Phillips' screen direction as a star in Bluebirds, introduced Louise Lovely to the series when the Austral ian beauty first appeared in American pictures. It was Dc Grasse who di rected Miss Phillips in several or ner riwnt Universal features, including untry Should Ci'll," a recent . j i release. In "The Price of Silence" this tal ented actress has the best role she ever played a part most exacting in high emotional work, while calling, as 'well, for adaptability in comedy and lighter shading of screen artistry. The pi eduction was made from W. Carey Wonderly's magazine story, of jthe same title, by Ida May Park, j Frank Witson, Lon Chaney, Jack Mul 1 hall, Jay Belasco, Vola Smith and I Evelyn Selbie will be principals in I the supporting organization. DRIED FRUITS Choice Italian Prunes, per lb . Choice California Apricots, per lb. Choice Seedless Raisins, per lb. : Choice California Peaches, per lb. ( hoice Ulack t igs, per lb. Choice White Figs, per lb Choice Petite Prunes, per lb. .. Choice Sultana Raisins per lb. .12 l-2c 20c ....18c 15c 15c 15c 10c 12 l-2c EATING AND COOKING APPLES Per Box 60c, 85c Oranges, per case, any size . $3.70 t z ar vtiirni tain i. 11. K. Co. SUITS - S15.0d, $20.00, $25.00 OVERCOATS $17.50 to $30.00 HILL'S DEPARTMENT STORE Quality and Service Harris Grocery PHONE MAIN 70 FARMERSPHONE B. 192 408 North Fir Street, Cross Track ARCADE BESSIE BARRISCALE AND ! CHAS. KAY IN LIGHTER VEIN 4 Gone Wh ere: ? Triangle Presents Them as Co-Stars in a Play Calculated to Warm the Cockles of the Heart. 1 Marking their first appearance to gether, Bessie Barriscale and Charles Kay will lie seen as co-stars at the Arcade theater , Wednesday and Thursday, when they are presented in a sero-comic Trianglc-Ince play by C. Gardner Sullivan, entitled "Home." Since the inception of the Triangle program these two popular players have been seen in nothing but strong ly dramatic offerings; hence unusual interest attached to their work in this production, which is of a lighter vein. "Home" is the story of a girl who fices her own life's happiness in suc devotes her efforts to saving her fam- ceeding. It is replete with comedy sit ily from the evils of a too-suddenly- uations, although its fundamental Acquired wealth and who nearly sacTi- 'theme is based on a big, serious idea. To 1316 Adams Just Next Door To Old Location OXNER'S PAINT STORE j Cincinnati Tribune. j The people of Mexico are engaged i in the task of preparing to adopt a new constitution. The convention was iiddres.sed recently by Carranza, the provisional president. In the course of his speech Carranza outlined a num ber of reforms which he recommended ,i s worthy of adoption. But the most rotable, not only from the Mexican, but from any other t nation's point or view, is found in the following: "You must conside!" whe ther the vote should be given to all or limited by educational or property qualifications. I think the vote should go to all but that it should be taken from those who make wrong use of it or those who look with indifference on the affairs of the public." If the latter proposition were a part of the ' American Constitution a large army I cf voters would have been disqualified ', in the state of Ohio at the recent elec ' tion, for a tabulation of the votes I cast shows that more than 20,00 j voters failed to vote for the I presidential candidate and as many as i 30,000 manifested the same feeling of indifference toward the candidates for the governorship. j H. D. lis are j home, i Clark. Clark and wife of Minneaopo visiting at the W. T. Potts Mrs. Potts is a sister of Mr. Mr. Clark is an old enginee on : the Soo line. It narrates the experiences of a sen sible girl upon her return from a Eur opean finishing school and shows how she cleverly awakens her kin to real- AT THE ARCADE THEATER WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY ; ,f ' V ?S4 If. ,,r . .wrj-f .v,(v v ization of their mistake. Miss Barriscale is seen as Bessie Wheaton, the girl who is confronted with the difficult task, and her per formance is said to mark another step in her remarkable advancement to ward versatility as a screen star. In the part of Bob Wfleaton, whom I the unhappy girl finds to be a fool, (Ray is declared to prove that he is as happily cast in light comedy as he is in heavy drama. His ready apprecia. I tion of every opportunity is manifest, : it is said, in each scene. I Supporting the two stars are six of the most accomplished players of the Triangle-Ince forces. They are Clara Williams, George Fisher, Agnes Her ring, Thomas S. Guise, Louise Glaum and J. J. Dowling. POSITIVE EVIDENCE t I from many people who have .cured of Eczema by using been f t h .: I ..4 up y- -iifcjk Ft V r , v i t ... fA3t MARA ECZEMA REMEDY is proof of its merit. Try it ta.lny. Sold only by us, 50c and 1.00. LEVY-VOGEL DRUG CO. La Grande, Oregon. HI 1 1 BARTON E ELABORATE MUSICAL i A rende theater. The Hewitts arc re-1 you ever hoar of playing a xylophone ACT COMING TO ARCADE marknMy versatile instrumentalists J with a violin bow? Well they do it. ; , , i,vl'" perform with equal skill on many . nd they also piny a lot of fresh in- An elaborate musical art will be of- ; different kiiuN of instruments, inelud-1 strumei ts in a lot of freak ways be- Torea to tno poo ie i in iirnnuc, : inf .o h the in u. eirinirn.1 v. . . . , .. i - . i f' -hh-.t luiiiin vui iunie line selections I . Wednesday and Thursday, when the ; riotit-x as well as ehinu-s and the ' from the old line instruments, such as BUTTER I.AHKLS-ror sale at Tin Five Musical Hewitts an near at the benutifnl v inni mir nii,-.i,ti.nn i t t ' 11,1 - - - i ..r. .v.... ...v. vilv iwiiii'i, itiuj rieiien num. The concert to be Hart rid e Whipp, Baritone, January 30th at the Metho dist Episcopal church, has already aroused much inter est. The singer comes well recommended by the various press reports of his concerts in other Oregon cities. lie possesses a magnificent voice of great range, power and quality combined with keen dramatic instinct and in every case, wins his audi ence from the start. PROGRAM RED LETTER DAY T11K NHKillUORIIOOI) CLUB Wednesday Kvcning, January 31, 1917 Piano Duct Mrs- R- J- t5nTu Mrs. (i. 8. Birnic Solo Mrs. T. J. Seroggin Object of Scholarship Loan Fund, Mrs. A. E. Ivanhoe Free Will Offering Elliott State Forestry Pictures We Thank You. Hood Night UTTT'T? lc am m i f AT SHERRY'S. 'JIJod.'Irt Corsets' ' rront Laced Tickets are on sale at Van Burens ADMISSION 50 CENTS j Observer office. SOLID COMFORT Standing, Sitting or Lying Down When you stop to think that you spend between five and six thousand hours every year in your corset, you must realize how importtn it is mai you nave a peneciiy comtortnde co:set. A poorly fitting corset frequently lends t. severe nervous and organic tumbles which cause years of suffering. In the MODART Corset we have a garment that always gives genuine conuur suung, eicnuing or lying town. PAULINE LF.IV.KLE, Sommer Hotel Bldg.