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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1917)
MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1917. LA GRANDE E iINING OBSERVER. PAGE SEVEN The Observer's Classified Ad. Page is The People's LOSING A GOOD TENANT IS A MISFORTUNE BUT FINDING A POOR ONE IS WORSE. PUT YOUR HOUSE, OR APARTMENT, OR OFFICE, OR STORE INTO THE MARKET, THROUGH INFORMATIVE C LASSIFED ADVERTISING. THEN YOU WILL NOTHAVE TO TAKE RISKS IN ACCEPTING A TENANT, BUT MAY-FIND ONE TO YOUR LIKING. HELP WANTED Female. I FOR BENT FOR SALE Real Estate. AN ! INTELLIGENT person may FOR RENT Modern 5 room house. . . ,. , "T earn sioo monthly correspond- 1504 Seventh. Inquire Dr. Rich- TweIv room f"'8' mod- Ing for newspapers; - $40 to $50 ardson. Adv. . O-zn-if era house in best residence section, of monthly in spare time; experience tna vm House Davs ' $70 ner unnecessary; no canvassing; sub- FOR RENT Office rooms over Levy- nouse pays Vv per jects suggested. Send for par- Vogel Vogel Drug store. Inquire month and furnishes 5 nice rooms for ticulars. National Press Bureau, Levy-Vogel. Adv. 6-28-tf. famiiy use Owner must sell at once Room 4296, Buffalo. N. Y. Aqv. . , 5-21-tf. FOR RENT Two unfurnished rooms health of momher of family com- close in. 2001 Second Phone Red pelg him to leave and will sell at a WANTED Experienced Housekeeper. 3112. 6-17-tf . , .. .. Address X, care of Observer. : bargain. Comparatively small cash Adv. 8-1-tf ; FOR SALE OR RENT Storage payment required. Balance can be w- - warehouse. Bargain. W. R. Kiv- . . . . . , , FOR RENT FURNISHED ette. Main 711 Adv. 7-26-tf. Paid moay " o toco"" from NICE 5-room house; also single FOR RENT-Housekeeping rooms. Property. Address X. care Observer, rooms. Call Red 1811. . 7-26-lm Black 1202 Adv. 7-26-tf. FOR, RENT Threo Room Furnished SALE OR RENT-Modern 5 EXCHA-NGE-Real Estate. Bungalow. Phoiw Red 3441. 1221 room housc- Cal1 Iam 780,-Ad W Ave. 8-1-tf 7-26-tf. FOR SALE Moving to Portland, or WANTED A Modern nicely furnish- FOR SALE Autos 'wish tot Write to us or call. We ea oTobseTvef0, L-tf FUR SALE-1916 used Ford in first- r rent Portland proper- FOR RENT 2 Room Furnished 'TCVh,ape-T'- E aITJs NEUHAUSEN C0-' 708 apartment. 1616 Sixth Street. Le.ghton sgarage Adv. 7-18-tf. Lewi BUgf porUana) Q 8-4-3t FOR SALE Second-hand Ford and , . . , . . - " Grant car, cheap. McCrary's Ga- WAN1TnKHiKT nnm HELP WANTED. rage. 8-4-tf "ANTED KHAKI CLOTH. YOUNG men and young ladies wanted SALE-Household Goods TJie Auxiliary to La Grande Hos- to prepare for telegraph service to a'- nui"""11 fill vacancies caused by unusual en- FOR SALE Furnitme for 2 nicely Pital Unit No. 1 needs khaki cloth' to listment, war and signal corps; big furnished housekeeping rooms. If mai5e 30 kits or the Donations demand for telegraph operators. wanted to rent rooms, they are . m,0i,i .m u .,i.j,.. . j Call or write Telegraph Dept., 506 close in and rent very reasonably. f knk bTe nkfully received. Panama Bldg., Portland, Ore Adv Address "W" cora of Observer Keport to Mrs. J. P. Graham or Mrs. 7-23-lmo. Adv. 7-24-tf. J. J. Carr. Adv. 7-27-ti THINGS OUGH KNOW The Observer believes that its readers will be glad to have in handy form a list of some of the things which go to make La Grande an ideal com munity in which to live. In this is sue there are recited only a few of the features used commonly in parad ing La Grande's substernal business stabilitiy, and why it is a city worthy of pride and confidence. . . . ' Here are reasons why La Grande is a city with a future and attracts ex acting families: It has a water supply the govern- Classified ads solve your want problems, CHICHESTER S PILLS rfF THE DIAJHONFk BRAND. f sT 'lil.4kM.trrM Dlamand IMIUin Ri-d nrj 41 old mrtalUc ljcs, sealed with Dluo Ribbon. TdLa no other. But of onp WrairrM. Asttforf lftOirESTEVS DIAMOND 1 1 It A 1 PILLS, for 8tt veir.knownuBt ' 'ttt-Always Reliable SO! ntfY P""'-lS' S EVERVWHFW IK 17) v SUPERIORITIES -a Safer Rear Axle Sludebaker engineers have been able to perfect the full-Moating Rear Axle by exhaustive study of the performance of hundreds of thousands of Studebaker cars under every imaginable condition of service. It stands to reason that the Studebaker full -floating axle is safest. Think a minute; with Studebaker the axle shaft turns the wheels nothing else. The axle-housing bears the weight of the car and takes up side thrusts from turns and skids. To a great extent, in the semi-floating type and altogether in the live axle, these strains are borne by the axle shaft itself. In any other type there's always danger of a broken shaft and a wheel coming off. So you see it is simply a matter of me chanical fact, that the Studebaker full floating rear axle is safest. Let us explain in detail this point of Studebaker value. Island City M. & I 1 M. Co. I C La Grande, Oregon 3 HO T LA mcnt inspectors call ideal; mountain water, pure and uncontaminated I and plenty of it. ' It has a modern, well-equipped and ;ceptionally well-regulated library. It has nine miles of paved streets. ' It has a city park second to none in the state in its facilities and scenic setting. It has a chautauqua o festablished merit. It has a school system embracing all the tried and true advanced ideas. It has a Y. M. C. A. doing a greater work than any similar institution of its size in the Northwest. It has splendid churches, well at tended and well administered. It has the commission-manager form of government. It has had no tuberculosis originat ink here in years, or contagious dis eases. It has enterprising businessmen. It is on the Lincoln highway and is already a station in transcontinental GRANDE automobile travel. It has Chicago-to-Portland passen ger train service of an ample sort. It has many active and enterprising lodges and several exceptionally fine lodge homes. It has a modern hospital. It has a low death rate. It is the county seat. ' It has a population of approximate ly 6500. It has the immensely rich Wallowa county tributary to it. It has the second largest payroll in the state. f It has two big sawmills near it. It has a division point with a rail road payroll this year of $66,000 monthly. It has a Commercial club. It has cigar factories. It has up-to-date moving picture houses. , It has a paid fire department with i automatic alarm and volunteer aux iliary. j It has a daily and a weekly news paper. It has a railroad men's club home. It has a modern and spacious pack ing plant. It has candy factories. It has modern tailor shops. It has annual grand prize motor cycle races. It has a .big cider mill. It has big flour mills. It has a bottling works. . It has a United States land office ,nnd postoffice housed in federal (urilding. It has headquarters for postoffice inspector. It has government dairy experts. It has county agriculturist head quarters. It has two fine creameries. It has a box factory. It has good hotels and apartment houses and restaurants. It has bubbling drinking fountains. It has laundries. It has ample electric light facili ties. It has hundreds of comfortable homes. It has a democratic people. It has an enormous amount of ce ment walks. It has a sanitary sewer and disposal tank. It hns a fair grounds and race track. , It has conservative, established ieal estate dealers. It has leading lines of life and fire insurance companies, j It has a chicken ranch recognized as a model, and many smaller poul try farms. It has livery stables. It has fully-equipped garages and leading auto agencies. It has several artesian wells. It has a progressive florist. It has good nurseries. It has first-class dairies. It has netive women's clubs. It has parent-teachers associations. It has playfrround facilities includ ing double-tennis court of cement and several clay courts. It has several wireless stations. It has prize-winning stock on near by farms. It has bnkeries. It has many wholesale houses and is recognized as a distributing point. It has a Salvation Army headquar ters. It has little crime. It has free delivery of mails both citv and rural. It hns a directory of mercantile es tablishments and general business houses that go to make up a well diversified business town. It has the famous Hot Lake sana torium 10 miles from its borders. Market Place FOR SALE Farm Lands. The Government needs farmers as well as Fighters. , Two million three hundred thousand acres of Oregon and California Railroad Co. Grant Lands. Title revested in United States. To be opened for homesteads and sale. Containing .some of best land left in United States. Large copyrighted map, showing land by sections and description of soil, climate, rainfall, elevations, temperature, etc., by coun ties.. Postpaid one dollar. Grant Lands Locating Co., Box 610, Port land, Ore Adv 6-22 D.-W. 8-mo. HELP WANTED Male. AN INTELLIGENT person may earn $100 monthly correspond ing for newspapers; $40 to $60 monthly in spare time; experience unnecessary; no canvassing; sub jects suggested. Send for par ticulars. National Press Bureau, Room 4296, Buffalo, N. Y. Adv. 5-21-tf. SAWYERS and Teamsters Wanted . Good wages; by Oregon Lumber Company, Baker, Ore. 8-1-tf WANTED A Grocery Clerk, apply at once Mammouth Grocery. 8-8-tf. WANTED Salesmen: Side Line Men. Do you want a real one that one order a dny will pay you $9.00. No samples to carry. Something new. (Write today. Canfield Mfg. C, 208 Sigel St., Chicago 111. It has two telephones, telegraph and express companies. It has large and commodious audi torium for dancing and mass meet ings. It has a modern foundry and iron works. It has ample timber for fuel close Jto town. it nas two modern banks. , It has rural credits association. It has the largest L. D. S. taber nacle outside of Salt Lake. It has a beautiful Episcopal guild hall. It has an assessed valuation of over $3,000,000, which is part of the country's valuation of over $21,000, pOO. . It has about it a chain of enterpris ing sister towns, such as North Pow der, Medical Springs, a hot springs re- flsort, Union, Cove, Elgin, Imbler, Sunv ImervUle and its own suburb of Island City, Alice, Perry, Hilgard, Starkey, Kamela. It has a ministerial association. It has several print shops. It has many other things that make it worth while. It has a brick yard. It has gasoline service stations. It has taxis. It has fine fishing in the river and creeks nearby. betters from &he front (Letter from V. R. Bainbridge, of the U. S. Navy, to his father B. Bain bridge, of Ladd Canyon.) Somewhere on the Atlantic, U. S. S. Frederick. June 21, 1917. Dear Fa'ther: Will drop you a few lines tonight to let you know 1 am fine and dandy and hope you are the same. I suppose you are busy har vesting by this time. What kind of a crop did you have? I haven't re ceived a letter for a long time, the last one I got you still had snow that day it was written; but it isn't be cnuse you folks haven't written. We haven't had any mail from the states for over a month, but expect to got some next week. I am looking for about ten letters. I am going to- get a whole day off to read them. I was ashore yesterday and bclinve me I sure had some time. Three of us got a car and looked the city over right, and talk about your pretty places, I can't describe it. The only thing I am sorry of is thnt you folks canlt see it. I am lucky. I wouldn't have missed seeing the places I've seen for anything. I am sure glad I joined the navy. Every time I see a battleship from another nation it makes me prouder than ever that I am an American; and believe mo, the people in this part of the world think (ho Americans are the best people In the world. When we go ashore they turn the town over to us. And if a sailor gets drunk (which doesn't hap pen very often) in place of arresting him they take him back to the ship. And they all hate the Germans, be lieve me. I wish I could tell you where I am but its against the regulations, so I shall have to wait till I get home. I'll have some real tales to tell this time. Have I out-traveled you yet? Well don't forget' to answer soon hoping you arc all well, I will close. With lovo to nil. Adddress: V. R. BAINBRIDGE, U. S. S. Frederick, Via New York. PR0FESB10NAL DIRECTORY OSTEOPA.TmCJ' DR. J. L. INGLE Osteopathic phy xician. Third floor New Foley Bldg. Hours 10-12 a, m.; 2-5 and 7-8 p. m., and by appointment. Office phone, Red 1761; residence Red 881. DR. MARGARET INGLE Osteo pathic physician. Diseases of wom en and children and obstetrics. PHYSICIAN, SURGEON AND OSTEOPATH . F. L. RALSTON, D. O., M. D Phy sician, Surgeon and Osteopath. Over Silverbhorn's Drug Store, Rooms 12, 13. Phone Main 21. VETERINARY DR. H. W. RILEY Graduate Veter inarian Hospital. 1409 Madison Ave. State Stallion Inspector end Inspec tor of stock for shipment. Home In dependent Phone, Black 41. Farmer Co-operative Phone, Main 112. ATTORNEYS CRAWFORD & EAKIN T. H. Crawford and Robert S. Eakin, At torneys at law. Practice in all the courts of the state and the United State. Office, West-Jacobson Bldg., Rooms 9-10-17, La Grande, Oregon. COCHRAN & EBERHARO Geo. T. Cochran and Colon R. c?berhard Attorneys. La Grande National Bank Building. R. J. GREEN Attorney at Law.. Rooms 12-13, West-Jacobseu Bldg., La Grande, Ore. Practices in all State and Federal courts. R. J. KITCHEN Attorney-at-law. The new Foley building. Practices in all State and Federal Courts. Phone Red 8681. E. W. EASTMAN Lawyer Offici West-Jacobson building. Phone Black 1801. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER H. E. ROSKAMP, Contractor and builder, La Grande, Ore., Phone Red 1981. ARCHITECTS. O. B. MILLER Architect, room 27, New Foley Bldg. Phone Red 1871. In the botanical gardens of Rio de Janeiro there are monster trees from the Amazon country . which . overtop the lofty royal palms and reach a height of 200 feet. FOR RENT SIGNS For xU f The Obserrsr offie. FRATERNAL DIRECTORY A. F. A A. M La Grande Lodge No. 41, A. F. & A. M. holds regular meetings fi.st and third, Saturday at 7:80 p. m. Cordial welcome to all Masons. , LOCKE B. MOE, W. M. A. C. WILLIAMS, Sec. B. P. O. E. ELKS, La Grange Lodge No. 433. Lodge meets each Thurs day evening at oight o clock. Home and club privileges cheerfully ex tended to all Brother Elks. NORMAN DESILET, Exalted Ruler. ADNA B. ROGERS. Secretary. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Red Cross , Lodge No. 27 meet every Monday I night in Castle HU1 (K. of P. Hall.) A Pythian welcome to all visiting Knights. W. D. M'CARTHY, C. C. DELILE GREEN K. of R. &&. MODERN WOODMKN OF AMER ICA La Grande Camp No. 770? meets on the first nd third Thurs day evenings of each month n the K. of P. Hall. Visiting neighbors welcome. H. E. DIXON, V. C. W. F. ASHMAN, Clerk, (Y. M. C. A.) WOODMEN OF THE WORLD La Grande Camp No. 169 meets ever; first and third Monday at Eagles' Hall. All visiting neighbors wel come. ROBERT McLANE, C. C. JOHN A. READ, Clerk. L. O. O. M La Grande Lodge No. 860 Loyal Order Of Moose hold regular meeting every Wednesday night at 8 p. m. in Eagle hall next to Elks' Bldg. on Washington Ave. Visitors always welcome. Dues pay able at Youn.,'s Sweets. GEO. YOUNG, Die. HARRY SWART. Sec. O. E. S. Hope Chapter No. 13, O. E. S. holds utated communications the second and fourth Wednesday ol each month. Visiting member cor dially welcomed. MYRTLE A. BROUGHTON, W. M MARY A. WARNICK, Sec ROYAL NEIGHBORS. IrU Camp meets every second Friday after noon and eery fourth Friday eve ning, every month in K. of P Hall All visiting memlers cordially wel comed. MINNIE BUNTING, Oracle. NELLIE V. VINACKE, Recorder. liiil In the trend which National affairs have taken, defense.! has become the watchword of our country. Used in any sense, the word implies protection against loss. A Savings Account in the United Stat es National Bank . provides a strong defense for the in dividual. It affords the best financial protection available in the face of the unexpected. ' . f welcomes Savings Accounts. 0 United States National Bank La Grande Oregon Z. L. OF SECURITY Mt. Em ily Council No. 2646. Meets second and fourth Th-u-sday evening at S o'clock at Eagla Hall. Visiting mem- 'ber are welcome. j C. E. STTPT, Pre J C. W. COOK, Pin, See. DORSEY BEAUMONT, Rec Sec. REBEKAHS Ciystal Lodge We. Mt Meeta every Tuesday evening in the I. O. 0. F. Hall. All visiting mem bers are invited to atvend. STELLA WEBB, N. G. ROSA GLASS, See. .'''" KHALED TEMPLE NO. 170 Dra matic Order Knights of Khorassan. Instituted Feb. 20, 1914; Meeta th third Friday of each month at K. Pi hall. All visiting Votaries welcom. H. C. REES, Secretary. 1UJ. Traill Muk. U. S. Pat. OfflOh I ! FRONT LACE CORSETS know what it means to be cor rectly corseted. They enjoy the ultimate of figure improvement, their health is promoted, and they are at all imes perfectly comfortable. You are cordially invited to en joy a fitting of these superb corsets. A complete line of new spring models just received. Priced at $2.00 up MRS, R0BT. PATTIS0N Coraetlere Res. 1702 Oak Phone Red 8221 ! WOMEN WHO WEAR ! I