Saturday, June 27, 102r.
THE LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER
I'a ire Thirteen
WALLOWA WOOL
i IS PURCHASED
: WAU-OWA. Ore. (Special)
Scverul of 1 ht farmers owning
f small flocks of sncep, wi-ro busy
the first of t h week delivering
their wool to the warehouse. A
part of the wool Is being wold to
? wool buyers, while some belongs
' to tin WOOl RTOWiTS' aSSOdat loti.
' Soni1 contraeiing of wuol wuh iJoiic
'? In this Hfi'tlun of the country u
; few weeks ago, at prices ranging
i around ii anil 4:1 cents per pound.
i Kom' of the farmers were fortun-
f nt wionch lo avail themsel veg of
these prices, while others who did
not contract have hold for less
since the drop in the price of wool.
V. U. Johnson, O. l- Heel and
S. T. Hat lie were named as uu
agricultural coniniltlee at a re.
cent im-ting or the grange here.
(leorge 'us.snn visited the latter
part xtf the week with his brothers
Kert and NorrlH Cus-sltis of Los
tine. Volunteer Wheat Vp.
pome excellent fields of volun
teer wheat are, up to he seen over
various purls of the county this
season, sonic of the nelda prtwnt
a mure uniform stund than other
field which w re needed lust ffllt,
Practhully all the full wheat In
this section of the country in heart
ed out ut thi time, und should the
warm weather continue, harvesting
will no doubt be slightly earlier
than last Beaton.
Many people from nil parts of
the surrounding country have nt
tended the carnival which has been
going hre during the part week.
The farmers in the valley sec
tion are busy Irrigating ut this
time. The recent warm wenlher
has causedVu considerable rise In
the river, h the snow has evidently
been melting rapidly In the high
mountains. No fears are entertain
ed for shortage of Irrigation water
j this H-son, as a large amount of
.solid now in reported by those
having made reevnt trips into the
mountain sections.
Wallowa grange No. fi03 held on
all day meeting here hist Satur
day, nttiiided by a fairly large
crowd of grangers. 1 tnner was
served ut noon by t he ladles of
the organization. A business meet
ing wuh held during ihe afternoon,
at which Hint a number of'thlngs
of interest to farmers wen taken
tip for discussion. One meeting a
month will be held during the busy
ft!
Try Our Most Popular
Feature
A SPECIAL
Three Course
DINNER
-At-
x J
50c
An ever changing variety of foods, deli
ciously cooked and well served.
Served 5:30 till 8:00 P. M.
CAFETERIA SERVICE DAILY
11:00 till 2:00 P. M.
FOUNTAIN - CANDIES
i3
A Delightful Place To Eat
Sawyer-Holmes
Merc. Co.
Dealers in
FUEL - HAY - GRAIN - LIME - C EMENT
PLASTER - POULTRY .SUPPLIES
SPRAYS - ROOFING PAPER
BUILDING PAPER
FIRE PLACE MATERIALS
AND FERTILIZERS
Phone Main 17
out ont WAY
By WILLIAMS
' " W'Cn Kin
MOVO OF FimoO"?.
fv-t. MtKS BAit A
AM'iThimCs VJHEsJ
Tm6 HOOM GOE.. INTO
THEM ? VNOwT
.Fi-bH tor HAM Crt"?
jCv-t iK)aTEAO?
OomT utT Akjs 8tOOO I
. splash ou Me
o. it i-r .
CtRACe.iF MOO
BRAM T VAJILt
0& iM-STAKifuM
Amo The Poca?
'
GETTiMCs
vslGGLC OM.
t ?7 tnKMKl TtBVKt. c"
Carnivorous Fish of River
Of Doubt Shown on Screen
part of l lie Reason, the next of
these meetings will be held July
18th, In the evening.
Klmer Osborne moved his plow
outfit and horses home from the
i:. G. Conch ranch in the hills the
first of the week. He lias been
helping with the mimmerfnllow
plowing there for the past few
weeks,
1 A. Downing and fatuity of
Leap spent .Sunday visiting at W.
y. Downing's on Hear creek.
Oscar Maxwell and crew finished
plowing sii tnnurf allow ut the 1.
O. Couch ranch the first of the
week. Those finishing up plowing
stale the ground plows very hard
nt this time, despite the largfl
amount of rain during the past
few weeks. The vegetation on the
ground has become so rank that
it is very difficult to cover with
the plows.
llenvy Itnins Sunday.
Iteports from the upper part of
the volley tell of nn unusually
heavy ruin in that section of the
counrty Sunday afternoon. The
storm Is rt-ported to have assumed
cloudTburst proportions in places,
cuuslng a large amount of water
to run In places for some time fol
lowing the storm.
The ground squirrels nre still
very active in many parts of the.
funning country and me doing
considerable datnnge to grain
crops in places. Many farmers are
busy distributing poisoned grain to
I he rodents,
Ed Bell and son T.eslie finished
working their large tract of mim
merfallow down the first of the
week.
Mrs. J. B. Gastln nnd sons Roy,
Pee, Kugerje and Irvln vh'lted Sun
day 0t Mr.s. H. V. Mock's.
I'rof. R. T. Bailie und wife left
recently for Pullman, Wash. They
have been engaged as teachers in
the schools here for the past three
years, but Intend teaching else
where next year.
Many of the dirt ronds In this
section of the country nre in n
very rough condition nt this time,
.due to being cut up during the
stormy weather. The road crews
have been busy with work on new
roods the greater part of the time
and have had but little time for
work on some of the roads lead
Ing Into the farming sections.
K. 1. Holme of La Grande, was
a business visitor here the fir.st of
the week. Mr. Holmes reports
crop conditions over the territory
over which he has traveled during
the past few weeks to be the best
he his ever seen.
Distant Seas Send
Vast Stocks of Fish
To Fulton Market
NEW YORK (AD Governor
Alfred K Smith, son of New York's
enst side, once was asked of he had
ft college degreet according to a
favorite story of the town. Vie re
plied gravely thnt he had nnd. when
asked what, it was, said: " l-
M."
This he translated with n broad
smile: "Kulton Klsh Market." The
governor hud worked there ns a
fish packer In his youth,
t Fulton Fish Market, now in its
j second century, continues us in
younp ' .m ' wmun s time xo ue me
country's greatest crossroads from
fishing smack to dinner table.
located in the lee of Brooklyn
Bridge, its annual business Is esti
mated nt fttfi.onn.nno. . It handles
from SAO. out). 000 to 400.0110,000
pounds Of sea food year in nnd
year out, which H receives all the
jway from the Atlantic to the I'a
fceifio. Great Uikes to th'e Gulf. Brr
' Ing Sea to the Grand Banks, the
! fishmongers say.
The market Fends this tremend
out poundage forth agnin over n
much shorter radius, however. So
; dense is the population in the. nsi
prn area which Kulton Market nup
ptles that the bulk of the shlp-
ments scarcely gets more than loo
I mlle.x from Knst River before it
has absorbed, it Is said.
I When Fulton Market was open
ed in 1822 its 340 original stands
were taken largely by butchers.
But early defaults on saw nnd
cleaver leases, together with grow
ing huslmMs nmong the hunt ling
fishermen and oysterrnen caused
the city authorities that October to
set aside the enst. or Beektnnn
wing "for use of sellers of fish."
Wholesale activity developed, nnd
nix years later the fish industry
moved to a shed of its own across
South street, opposite, tho innin
market, on the water. Ire, then
was unknown commercially, and
fish were kept In float In? "cars"
which were suspended in the Klip
below, bobbing against the hulls of
the smacks. Today, tee is used In
thousands of tons. Save for the
period from 1S43 to 18iii, the name
site, with different, root's hns
housed the wholesalers to this day.
Much of (he deep sea tang of
Fulton Fish Market Is felt lo be
lost with the pa.ssuig of the old time
fishing boats. Craft like the old
Gloucester smacks have largely dis
appeared. 1'ower engineering with
blusis of gas and smoke carried
awav the rigging that endured a
hundred storms. Magneto and car
buretor, t rott le and firebox, have
routed the old sinewy lieaveM on
Jib nnd sheet, topsail and staysail.
Klectn still follow blnefl:h 'from
Hattnrns to Monlnuk. mackerel
I from Cape Mnv to Nova Scotia.
and haddock and cod off the Banks.
! But Fulton Market itself ndmits
they nre different fleets.
BIO DI-; JANIKIiO. itratl (Al'l
An educational film has beeivev
hlblted In It lo tie Janlero showing
the wild life and frontier Industri
es in the Brazilian stute of fdntto
G.'ovso. Tills Is the second luif.nt
state In the union, being more than
twice the size of Texnw.
There nre plenty of Indians liv
ing In Matto G rosso, most of them
in the hunting and fishing period
of clvili.u'ton. The men of the
Bororo tribe", which was shot tor
the picture, use no clothing, bul
the women have been taught by
Federal Indian service to wv-nr n
simple form of dress. The most
popular style In necklaces Is made
by stringing a col led Ion of the
teeth of wild jaguari-. powerful I
and diingerous animals of the c:it
family which kill livestock through,
a great part of central and north-
rn Itra7.il. A peculiar wedding
custom was filmed, showing the
turn of n young man wit h the
hide of a jaguar, killi d to provo
his bravery, a necessary actbui be
fore the right of marriage is given
to n man.
Another feature of life In the in
terior, nient ioned by the late
Theodore Roosevelt In Ihe account
of his trip down the River of Ootiht
are the piranhas, the flesh -eat lug
fish which Inhabit some of the in
terior rivers. The operator threw j
a culf Into the stream. It was eat-j
en with I'stmilshinir rapidity bv an,
enormous school of ihese enve-r-j
nous l'l.'ih. Alllgfitors are numer-!
on a. j
Edges of the forest bordering the'
rivers an In many ptacesi white
with herons. The species nre fa-'
ninus for their aigrette fen 1 hers, j
There is a law in Matto Gi-osmo1
preventing the killing of these 1
birds. They hnve ft market price
of approximately JlfiO a pound, j
1 Ha in ond mining seems to be (
flourishing, the picture showing
one village where. It Is said, there
nre more than 3,000 men washing
river gravel nnd sedine-nt by hand.'
Gold Is washed by machinery.
Tho plains nre stocked with cat
tle, one xouo having 400,000 head.
Much of tho meat Is prepared for
market In the form of jerked beef.,
STORM HITS I'ltOT HOCK
I'KMH.KTON. Ore. A cloud
burst that struck near Pilot Rock,
accompanied by u violent thunder
storm and aome hull, did consider
able damage according to advices
received here, over oulte a large
urea the growing wheat was lodged
down bv tin violent downpour and
some harm was caused by hall.
Gulli vs from three to seven feet
deep and hp to 40 feet (n width
were reported washed through
wheat fields west of l'llot Rock. In
I'endleion there was no rain, ohlv
a stiff gate that brought clouds of
Inst from the bill lands. The
thermometer yesterday stood nt lOfl
degi h. the hottest day of the year
thus far.
roi.hi: pi-xay toviukt.
HA BUM. Ore. Tourists traveling
through SahTu should carry at least
two suits or underwear to insuro
llieru against arrest.
This w the statement made
here by K. F. WHIett. assistant
snles mnnager for the Yakima Fruit
Growers' association, who wus ar
retted end held for Investigation.
Mr. Wlllett, when arrested, wsm
taken to the police station where he
was searched. In hN traveling bo
the officers found only one suit
of underwear.
Mr: Willett told the police he nnd
Ma son hud star'ed on a vacation.
Th police doubted thin statement
and Ihe suspect whs confronted
with evidence that ho civried only
one extra suit of undies. Four
hoers nf oue.st'onlntr foliow-d.
Flnalle Mr. Wlllett and his son
were released and allowed to pro
ceed on their way.
The wild dog, sleeping In the
open, had first to bent down the
thick gross to make bin bed. He
did this bv turning round again and
again, his weight pressing down n
nest for himself as he does todav
through Instinct, inherited through
the ages.
Chairs last longer If tacks are
placed upright In Ihe seat. .
SF.NATOK VISITS S.MT.M
SA I (KM. ore Samuel W. Short
ridge, Fulled States semi tor frorn
California., who served as a Janitor
here In 1S74 and 18TR, arrived In
Salem in connection with Investiga
tions now ledng made )tv (he senate
naval affairs committee.
Senator Short ridge first arrived
In Salem In 1S74 and late ncoepted
emplovnient as caretaker of the old
Fast Side M-hool. He served In thin
ea pad t y for 1 wo years, wh en ho
moved In California with Ida
mother. ' - '.
Holdup Takes I'nniHj
NKW ORl.FANS (AD Bonis
J. l'restopnik was held up nnd
robbed of his wife and three chil
dren in his home, he told police.
jlle said Bomlulck Diaz, who lived
In the same building, pressed a re
volver to his head and ordered hhn
to surrenedr his family. Diaz and
the family left, and police learned
that, the family s baggage wis
checked to Ocean Springs. Miss.,
where police have been nsKed loj
apprehend the man.
IN THE PATH
OF PROGRESS
To study any particular human mechanism
properly and diagnose its ills is beyond the
power of any one man.
Rapid scientific advancement demands spe
cialists and complete modern equipment.
At the HOT LAKE SANATORIUM a com
petent staff of physicians and a well-equipped
laboratory give each individual the best pos
sible service.
The Hot Lake Sanatorium
Dr. W. T. Thy.
Owner and Director, I" I M
Music Lovers Worship
Amid Nature's Beauty
RAN TIF.TINAHDJNO, Cat. (AP.
A rapacious and probably
unique, natural amphitheatre, dis
tinctive in Its setting T.ltllO fe-
above sea level In the wood d
heart of the San Hernardlno
mojntnlns, on what Is known as
the "Him of the World," was
opened recently with a musical
program novel In Itself.
This huge out-door theater can
accommodate an audience of 51,
000 persons or more. The seating
arrangements Include everything
from the natural pine needles,
collected to form a seat, to cush
ioned chairs.
Instead of one stage there are
many. They are composed of
platforms of tnble-shnped rocks
artistically placed by the hand of
nature about the large amphi
theater. On one, hundreds of feet
above the audience, a violinist
standing In the shafts of color I
lights blended with the moon
beams t hrough the branches f
great trees on the mointaln side
shove him, rendered music from
the tun stern of long ago. I'rom
another, itcross a ravine on a
precipitous mountain side, ri
string- ounrtct played soflly whi'e
choruses sang from half hidden
caverns.
Vnrl-colored lights playing 11 bout
the u in phi theater created u fan
tastic effeet.
, Jilts Kid
i ' : "r
V
prtTiAHATlON
To render th
most dependnblft
and courteous
service
To th grentest
possible, number
of people
At the lowest cost
consistent with
fair wages to the
labor and cnpltnl
employed
Giving ond
deserving fair
treatment
thus
To bo a factor
In upbuilding
this community
Is tho objective
of this company.
i. 1 ...1 fri I y
13 Cents Of
Every
Dollar
Few people realize the extent of the total levy
of loeal, state and federal taxes upon Eastern Ore
gon Light and rower company.
It amounts to 1.') cents on every dollar which
you pay for electric service.
Notwithstanding this fact, Eastern Oregon
Light and Power company has been able to main
tain the price of electric service without increase,
during the past five years when tax levies have
soared upward.
Can you think of any other American. industry,
than that of the Kleetric' .Service ' indiitV.Ylijlj' ;
pays over to the government so large a proportion. '
of its gross income for taxes? m
fost of a chicken dinner dep.-nds
on how many chickens you invite.
There 1 no excuse for a bache
lor's being a good bur.
' iMgmnr Dnhtgran, actress, promlsM
Kid McCoy, former boxrr, to wsll
for him when he entered the Cali
fornia, penitentiary for manslnugh
ter. flut he's going to bt p for
long time, so the other day ahe and
Alex KlpKr, her vaudeville partner,
were secretly married ftt Klvereide,
Cllf,"
Eastern Oregon Light & Power Co.
to
6 'U
lis
J