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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1923)
PAGE NINE THE LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER Wednesday, November 21, 1923. X PARK PREPARING FOR THE WINTER THE PARK. (Kl)icial) Kd. Tur ner of 111k Crock, wus vlsitinij ut the 1'urk In thu eurly part of the wk, A. J. Vunilervunter went to HlB Creek after u load of hofis which he purchased from Homer Hurain S;itur Uay. Mrs. Ida M. Hunter la vlnitins with Mrs. Uddy Vandervanler during the week-end. Lester Miller Is slopplliK with his sister. Mrs. l.ldily Vundervunter, help ing IJert put In machinery. liuullnR wood and otherwise preparing for the winter. Mr. Cockrcl, of High Valley, re. ceived a letter from our old school teacher, J. H. Barton, tcllins that lie is In excellent heulth. John and Henry Shores, hrothers. aro cutting loss at the lludser flat sawmill. Ed. Gillespie is liaullnc wood for Claude Wood. Buster Oodsay is haulinc; wood for Ed Gillespie. Joseph Lay is drilling In his fall wheat. Mis. Itose I.ny entertained many visitors from nig Creel; and Union last week. Miss Helen Cantlnc, school teacher, accompanied by Laurel, Gay. and Ma ccl l.uy were ut Aunt Maud Vanor dcr's lust Tuesday. They brought ulong a sack of apples and used Clar ence Vanorder'fl cider press nnd made some fine sweet cider. This being a novel experience to Miss Cantlne, as she was born nnd raised in the city of Portland. Miss t'antine learns many things close to nature gathering a wisdom not found in books. Clarence- Vanorder again took a load of wheat to Union Thursday, He reportB that the prices on wheat were still on the decline, receiving only 83 cents for his premium wheat. The roads are reported in fair con dition for this time of the year. They arc a little muddy from Union to the Hall ranch. From the Hall ranch they are almost perfect and Ideal roads, being frozen and smooth. There Is a couple of coyotes acting queerly around the summit and the Smith place. Mrs. Llddy Vandervan tcr and Mrs. Ida M. Hunter and Miss Ida Hunter were driving along the road towurds evening when a coyote began to yelp and follow them along for quite a distance, howling the while. The women were frightened much at tile lugubrious screeching of the animal. And Thursday night ubout 9:30 Jack Hunter was return ing home with a pack of groceries strapped to his back, groceries that Clarence Vanorder had brought from Union when his dog scented tracks and took a shoot In the brush near by. All at once a shriek was let out nnd skirmishes apparently not twenty-five yards away were in evidence. The dog chased one coyote some dis tance while the other kept coming closer to the light of the lantern w hich Mr. Hunter curried. Having no gun. ho began to take his pack off. preparing for a fight, but the animal retreated at the approach of the re turning dog. These two coyotes fol lowed at a distance of about fifty yards for nearly a mile. All the while howling nnd yelping. The people here are at a loss as what the ani mals are -up to. Thuy are not mad but that following nnd yelping. It may be that they ale hungry. Jack Hunter moved their mail bos from the forks of the roads at rud dock ranch, to the summit at. Smith place. A large box was installed in addition for parcel post packages. MAKERS OF WHISKY HARK EN TO TALES . OF ANTI-PROHIS Tho National Horse Show in New York received the complete and! Unqualified attention of society. Many wonderful specimens of horseflesh! were on view. Mrs. A. RutleUse Smith is shown heretitop Panjola, boq prize'Wuinlng. beauty. The mult box Is now two miles from tho Uk Log Cabin. Mrs. Jreno Groupe of Portland, has sont a letter to her folks at the Hip Loff Cabin, in which she stunt os that she is ulrcady lonesome for her JOnst ern Oregon. Otherwise, she states that she is doing extraordinarily well at her school where she Is taking a course in stenography. A lutter from Miss EJeanor Javis, Portlund, states thai she is also tuk ing a stenographic course at the sume school with Mrs. Irene Groupe. Miss Oavls was formerly a Union girl, be ing the daughter of tho late Mayor M. R Davis. She now resides in Portland with her mother. The lot tor was sent to Mr. and Mrs. John B. Hunter. John Lay pussed through here with a load of bib sleighs plied high on his brand new Ford truck, going to Union. Mr. Lay is moving his outfit to his new home ubout two miles east of halfway, near Pl:te, in Pine Valley. Lewis Greonough occasionally visits La Grange from his pluce of work. Mr. Greenough is well known here and was formerly a Union boy. He was for a long time employed by the White Pin'c company at Austin and vicinity. One of the cruising crows is camp ed at the Taylor-Green meadowa at the head of South Fork. Mrs. Cynthia South, of Medical, and her son-in-law, Vietor Love, were at the Clarence Vanordor ranch one day Insl week. They were on business re garding grain bought of Itoss Jones, North 1'owder. Jack Hunter, jr., who Is attending school at tho Park and slopping with Aunt Maud, visited his parents Satur day at the Forks. Robert Lee (Hobby) Hunler, was on tho sick list for a few days, but Is now recuperated and as well as ever. Wo aro pleased to nolo that tho news from The Park Is appreciated all over the country. Kven In Port land there are people who are eager to got tho Observer to read their "home news." Forger Back in Prison. SALEM, Or. William Doss, who was pardoned from tho pententiary last summer and wlio later forged a number of chocks at McMinnville and subsequently escaped from jail there, was returned to the prison today to servo a term of throe years. Doss early tills year was made a trusty at tho prison and wus sent to the penitentiary wood camp at McMinn ville. Because of the service given the slate there, he was pardoned by the governor. A day or two later he returned to McMinnville whore ie forged and passed A number of worthless checks. He was arrested, but broke Jail. He w;ih apprehended a few days ago, tried and convicted of the forgery charge and returned to tho peniten tiary. Doss originally was received at the prison from Columbia county to servo a term for luixeny. Ivcad tlui Observer Want Ads. Spasmodic Croup Is frequently relieved by one application of Vapo Rub Opt 17 Milt ion Jar Uied Ymarly 13NDON', (AP) Perish tho thought that wlnn and whiskey -makers oppose prohibition out of regard for their own poeketbooks. To hear them, one would believe If the whole world decided to go dry in the next two or three years, they could all clean up enough money stocking cel lars in the meantime, to rot ire with untold riches and live happily ever after. Not another lick of work would they ever have to do. Hut these men regard themselves as "the heirs of a great tradition." That's why they wnnt to keep working; that's why they don't want people to give up buying wines and whiskeys. As the heirs of a great tradition, they feel they "must pass o the torch." This may sound like nonsense to Konic people, but tho liquor makers of lOngtand aro trying to convince them selves that It Is so. They have beet, mylng it, over and over again, at the fourth conference of the Lique Inter nationale ties Advcrsatros des Prohibi tion, which has been meeting In Lon don, Sir Archibald Held of England, nn official of the Itoyul Society of Mcdl cine( addressed the conference on "Tho Prohibition Fallacy." He said that when government tried to en force prohibition they entered into a fight against nature In which they were always beaten In tho long run. He advocated keeping drunkards so ber, and forbidding them to have children, but didn't say exactly how cither of these two reforms might be accomplished. If necessary, he said, use force to keep drunkards sober. Ho preached temperance. H. 1 Fox of tho United States Brewers' Association, told tho Euro- j pea n delegates what a horrible state of affairs had arisen in America since ' the Eighteenth Amendment. There hnd been a startling Increase in the J number of automobllo accidents which were due to drunken drivers, he said, and an equally startling In crease in divorces, suicides and ho micides. Day by day the newspapers recorded the nuifiber of deaths from the effect of poisonous liquor. Indi vidual operation of distilleries and home wine-presses had become com mon. Mid Mr. Fox. The New Zealand delegate said his country had taken ten referendums on tho prohibition question, and wus further from prohibition than evor. K. Ituthorford, chairman of the Wine and Spirit Trade Defonco Fund, assured the Continental delegations that drunken men are rare sights In England. He said he had no Ill-feeling against tee-totallers as such; Kngll.sh wine merchants knew that tee-totall ers were among their best customers. Tho man who "took just a little drop to make him sleep," who soused Christmas pudding with brandy sauce, nnd who maintained port was a tee-total beverage, was a pretty good customer, after all. Everyone at the conference scorned to agreo that both prohibition and heavy drinking are bad, and that the middle road of temperance U tho one the world ought to travel. If he can take two Binall fragments of truth aud muko a large convincing j lie, he Is a propagandist. y . a I Always Take X I I KASCARAQQININEI Relieve ' COLD IN X4 HOURS LA GRIPPE IN 3 DAYS I All Drugslits $0 cent. i TURKEY TIME I Have Granite and Aluminum ROASTERS To fit any size .turkey for Thanksgiving Also Turkey riatlcrs And Dinner Sets F. L. Lilly Hardware If Kidneys Act Bad Take Salts Says Backache Often Meant You Have Not Been Drinking Enough Water RED PEPPER FOB I I RHEUMATIC PA1M H. & S. Electric Co. APPLIANCES AND LIGHTING FIXTURES EDISON MAZDA LAMPS MOTOR REPAIRING AND REWINDING 107 Depot St. Phone 393-W When you wake up with backache and" ; dull misery in the kidney region it may mean you have been eating foods which create acids, says a well-known author ity. An excess of such acids overworks the kidneys in their cfTort to filter it from the blood and they Iwcomc sort of paralyzed and logy. When your kid neys get sluggish and clog you must i relieve theni, like you relieve your ' bowels, removing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spelts; your stomach i sours, tongue is coated and when the , weather is bad you have rheumatic ; twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of i sediment, channels often get sore, water : scalds and you are obliged to seek relief i two or three times during the night. ICither consult a good, reliable physi- clan at once or get from your phurnia j cist about four ounces of Jau Salts; ! take a tablespoonful in a Rlass of water j before breakfast for a few days and I your kidneys may then act fine. This ; famous salts is made from the acid of f rapes and lemon juice, combined with ithia, and has been used for years to ! help clean and stimulate sluggish kid ' neysh also to neutralize acids in the I system, so they no longer irritate, thus often relieving bladder weakness. t-,1 Q-.it. ; ;vc;,.B f cent iithia-water drink. Drink lots of soft water. By all means have your physician examine your kidneys at least twice a year. Just Received A now lino of fine Alaska Pablo ready to wear. Also full line of Alaska Heat Moccasins. All Kinds of Haw Fund Itought nnd Sold CHRIS MILLER 1510 A OA. MS AVE. Red Pepper Rub takes the "ouch" from spre, stiff, achipg joints. It can not hurt you, and it certainly stops that old rheumatism torture at once. When you are suffering so you can hardly get around, just try Red Pepper Rub and you wilt have the quickest re lief known. Nothing has such concen trated, penetrating heat as red peppers. Just as soon as you apply Red Pepper Rub you will feci the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Pain and sore ness are gone. Ask any good druggist for a jar of Rowlcs Red Pepper Rub. Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Row lei on each package. Don't Forget If It Is Axles Shims - Valves Fan Belts - Springs - Pistons Gaskets - Hearings - Piston Pins Drake Lining - Piston Rings You Will Find It In Our Automobile Replacement Parts Stock Leighton's Welding & Machine Works UNION-LA GRANDE AUTO STAGE SCIIEDUIiE Lcnvcs Irfi Cii-nmlfl fit 8:30 A. M. 1:00 I. M. 6;16 P. M. I.envcs liii (irnmle on Stiutlnys at 6:00 r. M. p. o. nciiAP Frop. oooooooooooooooooooooooooo o o o o o Use the New Scotch Mist STATIONERY oooooooooooooooooooooooooo o o o o o o o o o o o o o o. o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o PATRONIZE oooooooooooooodoooooooooooooooooocoocoooooooooboooooo o : o ! o o . 0 0 o 3 0 0 0 o o a 3 9 3 3 a o a a a a a i o a The Grande Ronde Meat Co. All the Time FOR THE BEST MEATS C I C I cio o i o C lo OOOOOOOOOOOO ooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooooooo The Straight Lines of the New Modes Are Gracefully Achieved By Wearing Front Lace Comet. Never have the etylca called eo Insistently for lines that are tralgnt and slender. "La Ca mllle" works wonders In gently persuading surplus flesh Into fashion's silhouette makes your gown a smooth-fitting success. Tou'U love the new models of "La Camilla" giving yon the lines and buoyancy of youth. Low-topped and of dainty fab rleation llphtly boned but vis ible only In tbelr benefits. Be fitted to your Individual model of "La Camilla" and en joy a youthful figure and a flex. Ible ease that Is delightful. A con-plot line of the latest models always on band. Mrs. Robt. Pattison Ooroetlere) Ltiaue 122-W B. 1101 Oak Scatter Sunshine With Xmas Cards DON'T FORGET A RELATIVE OR FRIEND BY NEGLECTING TO SELECT YOUR CARDS EARLY Come in and look over our Wonderful Stock Newlin Book &: Stationery Co. r OUR COAL IS BEST GRADE OUR SERVICE IS PROMPT OUR PRICES ARE REASONABLE OUR COAL IS SCREENED IT SATISFIES HUNDREDS MAY WE HAVE YOUR NEXT ORDER DRY WOOD 00 v TRANSFER MOVING FEED STORAGE PACKING GASOLINE - OILS - TIRES THE DURANT CAR A grey tone, stylish, g snappy paper for those o who are particular. ( HHSCfllPlW UKUGGIST5 On the Main Corner o o o o oooooooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooooooo o o 0 2 o 2 o o o o Do You Like Home Cooking? This Place Has It Delicious Coffee Fine Food. Pleasant r.urroundings. All We Ask Is a Trial New Sommer Grill Cor. Wash. & Depot St oooooooooooooooooooooooooo J. D. Lynch Go jam Milk For infant f. invalid t & Children The OriRinfll Food-Drink Tor Ail At'Ca QuIckLunchBtHomc Otfirc (k Fount. n.ins. Rich Milk, Mai ted Grain Extract In ?ow dcriTa'olfitforms. Noutdt.Ha-Noeootio. 2" Avoid Imitations nrd Substitutes PHONE MAIN 10 ! La Grande Mattress and j Weaving Works J ! Matlii'ttscB of all klmls clonnnd nnd rebuilt. Foathor Itenavfttlnff. f I Urn? and Fluff lugs made to or- j I dvr and for sale, I Carpet, and Rug Cleaning. Licensed runiKlor. Factory Phons 261-W CI1AS. EDWARDS, Prop. aeoooeooooaooaoBuacoooijooo