Tuesday, July 21, 1925.. Page Four THE Lfl GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER 1 . OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMSI An Independent Newspaper FRANK B. APPI.EBY . BARVEV If. MATTHEW8. ......Editor and Publlshsi Uualneu Managsr SSBSSaSSSSBSSSSSSBeSSSSSHeSBBSSeeBBSSSBBBSBBBMBMBe i "fi Published evenings, except Sunday, at 1410 Attain Avenuu. (A Grande, Oregon. Tho OLmorvor-Btar publlslied evory I'Tltlay , i Entered at the Foatoiflce at La Grande, Oregon, as tieoond Claw Mall Matter under act nt Murcn 2, 187s. OFFICIAL PAPEH OK UNION COUNT? ANP THB CITY OK LA GltANDE i MEMUElt ABBOCIATED PKEB8 - . The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to use (or pub lication of all news dmpatcbes credited to It or not otherwise credited If published therein All rights of republication of special dispatches In this paper, and also the local news here in also are reserved. , .. SUB8CH1PTION KATEB . By Carrier Dally, per month In advance- Dally, six months In advance.. bally, single copy 11 Daily, per month in advance.. Dally, per six months In advance. Dally, per year In advance.. Weekly Observer-Star, per year.., ADVERTISING RATES Display, foreign, por column Inch. Display, local, por column lncli......... Time contract ratos on application. . AND THE LOrtD DIHKCT Di-ioa, aou inio mo jiuufin wuiiing iui iiintji. 11 iueauiuii- iuns 3:1,. ; .Unfair and warmer is the the-wcather last week. j jijuropc considered the Scopes trial as a huge joke on America whicli indicates that the foreign sense of humor isn't rso bad after all. i Ik- : ! $ync people may not he doing much toward making two L!ade4 of grass grow where one grew before, but they are trying to put two automobiles where but one was previously a lairgo burden. us , ""' 7"-". " Scopes has been found guilty in the evolution trial at Dajjton, Tenn., which is what everyone expected, oven the attorneys for the defense. The law is plain and the guilt of the defendant was obvious under that law.'. This trial v-a jierely a preliminary step in getting the question be fora Ihe supreme court for the fight to 'declare the law unconstitutional. That will come later. , .. i fhe Stacklands in Cove arc already known far and wide for.tKeir cherry operations but the new orchards they have imt in recently will giyo in a Jew years the Im-gpst iinidiic lngT ocTfafff" of "Tweet ' cliemes i tS tho world. And that's taking in a lot of territory. They have over 200 acres in the new place' and also have what would be ' considered lurg apricot, pear and nut acreage. This year's crop has lecij. less than 10 per cent of normal but Covo goes right ahed in the cherry business just the same. It is an ac tivity of tremendous value to this valley and is one that willjgrow in importance through the years. i 3 HENRY FORD ON DANCING. i Henry Ford has come out in an interview in favor of jthe suld-fnshioned "square dances." lie is undertaking to revive interest in the quadrille, the lancers, the Virginia reel.-.and those other terpsichorean inventions which wero pophlar when he was a boy and are still occasionally danced in remote rural communities. Mr. Ford has set aside a ballroom in his Dearborn laboratory and engaged a dancing jnasijcr to leach classes in which the automobile magnate hlinjjoir sometimes joins, lie is quoted to tho effect that ;"th4old dunces are in the blood of the American people i;nd:jwill never die." If the people can only see them, he licli;wes, they will become popular again. He dislikes the con temporary dames, finding no style or grace in them. tl.is a commendable enterprise in which Mr. l'ord is en pged. Multitudes will icadily agree with him that the old fashioned dances are more beautiful than the one-step and the-fox-trot. Kill conditions do Hot seem favornble to the i.uccess of his venture. The tendency is not in tho direc tion; of the formal stately dances of yore, but in the oppo site, direction, as the popular interest now being displayed in the Charleston bears witness. This is akin to the buck iind wing and the tuikey trot and is said jo have originated among the negioes of the South Carolina metropolis. The quadrille does not fit well into the jazz age. Tin; youiig men and women who deteiinine what dances are to be popular have little legaid is lo lie lound in the minuet. They demand informality. II is hard lo picture bobbed hair girls as curtseying and balloon-trousered youths us bowing in the giaceful fashion that whs in vogue general ions ago. Still the old dunces may come back In time. The classic il'incing of the Mieienl. Greeks was revived by Isadora Dun (airand Ruth St. Denis. The Russians put new life into lln moribund ballet. Old forms of ballroom dancing may also return. MARKET JOEL'S GROCERIES Phone Main 759 DKOMKDAKV FLORIDA (.UAPKl HI IT .'iOc )or tin. ; onderfuI for siilad, cocktail, or dcsKcri. Five hcrvinK-s io the tin. 760 -14.60 e Mail -60s. -12.10 ..16.00 4! .(ia YOUlt IlEAItTH Into tllO lovu way we should have designated for the I'oinml stateliness that ! WWUA WOT OOlWGr WcouUDki SHE. Y lGOTrT MES ! suh cooldw I ' iifcojp.i uunu lAii YlU CALL 'BiT WE SC3RED MEvER SAV i TZTm W' WILL RHNMfc WITH AVJ, po-fUfc-r HOW TAT ? &tFr, UKE. f$LH 1 lUt MAIDEN VAEREL IQvN OAW- X COUID WRflfe) A G AW -MOPE.,) MUOMEREO AWD67E0" "spzjT . PGHLTfW t I GOVX. MOT. CfC - J I AT HIM IN AvNE- (f y ( SKERS li ( TS? i- , AlHt con&x BemT yffiiMA V more uke ) ' i L 'A-tO KISS HER -LETS J tfefVli VSANDPAPUWy tt j E MOAvNE r -I OFFICE CAT 1 VRAM MAUN (tlfl. J1nain t li Irnrlclraiiiiiir Is .n tlriitf. I'niiimiiit'liiK: it t.iirrtftl,v mlu'.it cure lx-kjnv. Oh no, DoriB. no muHcr liow ltutiKry u horse may bo, lu- cannol out u bit . Tin importnnl Uiinff Ih not whether tin? boy ran Mund aloin' ut one year; whether or not lie tan do U ut twenty-one la the real NO 'HIIMMIXC.S LHnrr (who lin fount, a plere nf wimmI in ils Mitisntfc) "U alter, I don't mlml tho ilng, but I bur the kennel." The best way lo lotaie fresh veKetubh-H Ih to follow yulir chlek ig early In the lnorninK:. ' What we cull luck Ih nltnply pluck AnU dointf thliiKM over tnut over. Courage unil will T'lTHciTranee and hklM Are the four leuvea or litiek'H (.'lover. It Is a fafe b'l thul luiHierit wtm 't jidvitcutc n law ni'oli ilill Inir bobbed hair thin ear. It la uma.luK how many people there arc who slinply want lo uel In the way. Tl' world's meanest fulrNinnii the hint who Mdil the widow nn extrn pair if uin(s when she iMnijrht a niiK to bury Iier liu.slnuid In. The present excil'-iiKtit. oer iex mlht lead a Ntiaimer troni auo t her planet lo KUppo.se thai m' hud only recently been discovered. ''W'lieip h the eletrt rind deparf ment ?" t he I'lHpper HHked, ".lil.Ht walk t h If wliy. inlSM.' hhIiI the hardware clerk, who WiH buw lfKifed. "Vou fresh mint? I hiiiK." t'aid the girl," "I'd ille fil:.i:- No I'litm Itejii h miIIh are dm cool u h llie advcrtif-enietit states. W'e h;ne ni11ee( f lull In most blirber Htlil'N the ''Nfi TlpplMK" hIkmm hit wriMen hi linislble Ink. We iicci dreauied that thtv-Nso could ir as sIcimcIcs as hoiiic id them a iv. t ki the drilKstm-e cowboy who retuwe.s ( Iii to ,,1,1 aKt.. hii.h. "I l -'tlll tied tit i;ille IMhrc after twenty jeitrs ul-setiei and there wjih Ute post mast -r still 111 hlH fatirl(e stiiiiipimi firitiinds. nly a wise child :.it und ai ts stupid as Mother siell srnull town tiosstp to keep lilm froin eatehhiK What's the use nl' "better honi ed" if people won't .(ay in them? M lieat china U the kind )t-.r drop 0 tafily. Yesterday In Washington The I ullid Mutes remitted the Chinese boxer Indemnity, IdartUKS were begun by u coll irrenslouut comuilKHtoii on postal tatc. o. I. Van Swcrtnpen resumed testimony beforv the Interstato connneree romiidsston on the Nick el l'hito consolidation. .THE COLLABORATORS. ,.V, J Scientist Maizes Rich Haul 1 In The Phillipine Islands MANILA AI') one of the most extensive urchcolojiical invest k:i-tion-s ever made in the I'hilippine Islands, covcriiifj a period of three i'aiH. has been compb-ted by an expedition, head by Ir. Carl K (.Jul he of tlie rniverstly of Miehi un. A laiKe number of articles, principally Chinese pottery, have already been shipped to tho Vlii verslty id - Michigan and other shitmentH are to follow. "The expedition which w.ih Ini tiated IhroiiKlt the efforts of the late I lean '. Worcester. former secretary of the interior of .. I he Philippines, hits merely seratche-l the suifuee of rhitippiue an heol opy." iullie slated, "and we hope that the re.sulis obtained thus far will serve as a busis to advance Urn study of I'hilippine iinthropo Iokv amoiiK seienliids. "The original purpose of Hie ex pedition was tn make as complete a study of the burial caves or the Philippines as conditions and time permitted. The problem -was ih'-n S FAGE PROBLEM NKW YORK (AP Kor 1 ln flrst time in its Ho iear; of exis tence the i;piscop;i Church in the t'nitcd stales is facing the election of a presiding bishop who will be the democratic choice of its entire membership. The election will oc cur at Hie forty-eighth Triennial General Coin en t ion to ho held in Net Orleans. October 7 to ''H. Jn rank and dignity, if nol in titular HtandiUK. its choice will .viand on a par with the Archbish op of Canterbury, ninkiiiK head id the Chun h of Km: hi ml; and he will be chai'Ked wilh the eaclliiK and onerous duties of eeclesiastl- EPISCOPALIAN Bryan Takes It Easy V ' N . 1 ; -. rlisglvlu'lllwrlt1llll mn i isitiiiiiu n nsW W 1 1 1 i u in J.imints lii'iin iin,s wiiiMii t. Imt whi n l il,.(i his ii his (un he doivu't mind It I found to be much hii-er than cx j peeled, with Hie result that the j (,eoj;iiiphlcal limits of (he survey 1 were curtailed to include only I thai part of the aiclnpehiKO south jof the nih parallel, it was also j found 1 hat evidence, of Chinese trade relations with the Islands i were encountered in K'aves and burial grounds Ion; since forKoL i leu. which were accidentally dis I closed by the plows of pinners in the lillls. J "The mutci-mi results alone far j exceed the most sjiUKtline expecta Ui'uis of those who instigated i.hc I expeiition." la the course of two and a half tyenrs work in the southern Phillp I pines every Island of any size south of the Uth parallel of lati tude was visited at least once by m rubers of the e pt-d it Ion. More than l.onn unbroken :;peel niens of Chinese wares were col lected and several 1 tliousa'nd ' of broken pieces were found in vari ous parts of the vision oxnlured. cal as w'"ll aa liduiiHistrative head ship of the independent American church. Kor (en years nrter the orirnulza tioti of the chun h in 1 7 fi f. , Its pry Nidliur bisaop was i lei-ted by the House of liishopa. In IT'.Ti i-liiinp; was male, nn-.i'-r which fhe office devohed upon the senior bishop in the American succession, Then in I'.tl'J the General Convention created th" National Council of the church, and enacted thai up on the expiration of t he term of office or the then presiding bish op his successor should be chosen by the House of lllshops, with Hie concurrence of the House of le putlcM. to sewc for a term of Mix yea re. The intention of the con vention was that the presfdiui; I btship thus eleet' d should become the head of the National Council, JthiTs cumhlnini; the ecclesiastical j with tin- administrative function. I hit, siru e t he venerable I anlcl Sylvester Tnttle, of Missouri, was jtlnn the prvHttiinK bishop, und ua 1 X , x .if -v . Ml lnivlon. Tvnn., has plrnty of wnrm coiit. tlmla uu lusy vhalr and jikks so much. N. K. his advanced aye precluded him from assuming udmiuistrulivo du ll ea, the canon was no worded that no election for hi successor was to 1 held during the period of Ids life. Itt, f:v. Thomas Krnnk tiattor. Uishop of Tennessee, was elected president of the council, und re-elected at the Triennial Convention of l'J.1'2. A year later Bishop Tuttle dh ij. but the gener al convention not beliiK in session. Hie UKt-d Hlshop of iJaihis, Ur. Al exander C. Oarrett, succeeded him 1 by tho seniority rule. Vpon Dr. i Garrett's death six months later, jHt. Kev. Kthelhert Talbot, 1 3).. tlHUp U U'.HHt'lH.IM, OUI-LtlUlMI IU the office. uIho by right of senior ity. With the coming triennial convention, t he first since Itisop Tittle's death, the first formal el ection of a presiding bishop by both houses of the convention de riving direct from the church membership will take plucu. Herlous problems face the church in connection 'with this e lection. The canon provides that tho convention shall choose as pre siding bishop "one of tho bishops having jurisdiction in the United States;" but it also provides that his term shall be for six years. This is where the problem arises. The new presiding bishop , will not only be culled upon to dis charge ids administrative dutitu as President of the. Council, but he will have to assume as well the ecclesiastical leadership of the church, which will utterly preclude him from any participation in the smiles,, of ,11,4 djoeesu of..wMe,li h,e is the titular head. In the mean time, of course, his coadjutor will lie administering the diocese. Hut ut the end of six years, it is being pointed out. when the presiding bishop presumably will return to Hall's Catarrh Medicine zf&Jt It rid your system u. Catarrh or Deaf ness caused by Catarrh. Sold by druttist far ovtr 40 ytari F.J.CHENEY & CO-Toledo. Ohid The Start Isn't Hard HUT Kl:i;i'INO AT Y.)I!U SAVINGS AC COUNT IS WHAT ' COUNTS. . . . IS YOl'IiS CKOWINQ Ri:0l-.A1!LY KVUUT La Grande National Bank Sound Uellnbla - Viogeaslve Always GOOD LUCK With ANSC0 FILMS 'Tits The l.ighl" All Sizes THE L & L DRUG CO. Hart Schaffner h Marx Fine Clothes Cool Woven Wosteds for Summer Wear $45, $50 & $55 COOL, COM FORT A BLE SOX (Interwoven) Sirungi-Mt nud ThluiieM Sux Jlaile. 33c to ?1.00 WEST & CO. his diocese he will have lost all touch wilh that Jurisdiction, and his enforced return after this lengthy absence wit work an in justice on him as well as upon ihc coadjutor in charge. One solution offered Is through the election of u presiding bishop to serve imt II he reaches a. retir ing age which shall be fixed, thus releasing htm definitely from hi diocese and pnviug the way for the. election of his successor. An other is that upon the expiration of the term of the presiding bish op, providing that he bo not re elected, he be retired on a. pen sion, and some dignified service in the church be aligned to him. Aged Oottplr Marry. Al.ltANY. Ore. One of the old est couph-H t hat ever secured a I license to marry took o'lt n mar riage license. Mrs. lOinina Harri son, lil of nrownsviile. und Henry j I.. Williams, )U of Lebanon, were I the contracting parlies.- It Jfl Mr. I Williams third nun rkige and the ' bride's second. Baby Peggy Sweateis Slllt-FilMT l'opulap t:Uirs ' Tin.. Vfry lutcat in small clr!s' sport wr:ir. Jc 3 lo 7 JW.93 VOII.Ii DUIvSSKS Abu a lo ID. . . l'lict. $1.75 to Sj.WI., Norton's Kiddy Shop Uvvrjlliliig hi lufoiita anil Oiililrru's Wwir 1JUV PROTECTED Firestone Tires Perkins Phone M-500 For Every Room .1 i . Quality Floors Armstrongs Linoleum Jbr &vy W in thc House W. H. Bohnenkamp Co. Eslabli.shetl 1M6 INC. Poets Corner oiu;g. (Ity . H. IMillil) Oh Oregon! My Oregon! Land of the pure ond free We bow before thy regal throne In matchless majesty. Thy mountains and thy hilts so grand , Are emblems of the free. Thy rivers and thy lakes so ch ar Show forth thy purity! We love thy rocks, thy verdure green That grows on every hand. In all this wide wide continent There la no place so grand. Thy people are so brave and kind, ,S noble nd so free In ull their words and deeds, they own God's gracious majesty. Motor Co. Corner 4th and Adiims in the House.