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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1925)
Friday, October 2, 1925. THE LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER Pagg Sam JUST A LITTLE HINT I 1U J f3 Publiibed by Arrangement with First National Pictures, and Frank Lloyd Production Inc. , C1IAITKR VIII. .Continued) jthrouffh." . After tJiey hud mwM fur awhile hint on peered down over the edgre Jerry cried: "Hoy! She's runnin I of the loff. "It's your-opinion I'm out ukuHi." He accompanied this . a what?" he Inquired with vicious remark by an abrupt cessation of calmness. effort. As a result the saw stopped ! "Kothinff. It's no use to tell you. In lis downward course and Tom's Now then, lift, bite, leg Why chin came into violent contact wlih the upipr handle. The man above uttered a cry of don't you lift?' "I am lifting. Iakko your end!" Mr. Linton tugged violently but the pain and fury; he clapped a hand i saw came up Blowly. It ro.se and to his face as If to catcli and save jfe aeveral times but with the same his teeth. . j feeling of dead weight attached to Jerry giggled with a nhameless , it Tom wiped the tweat out of his lack of feeling. "Spit 'em out." ho! eyes and once attain In a slormv cackled. "They ain't no more good to you than a mouthful of pop corn." Ho was not really amused sat his partner's mishap; on the contrary, he was more than a lit tie concerned by it. but fatigue had rendered him absurdly hyster ical ,nnd the constant friction of mental, spiritual, and physical con tact with Tom hsiri fretted his soul a thut saw dust Inside his clothes had fretted his body. "Ho. he! Ho, ho!" he chortled. "You don't shove. Oh, no! All the sMme, whenever I stop pullin' you butt your brains out." "I din't shove!" The ferocity of this den Nil was modifiertand muff led by reason of the fact that a greater part of the speaker's hand was Inside his mouth an dhis fin gers were tuklng stock of Its con tents. "All right you ' didn't shove. Have it your wity. I Bald she was runnin' out again. Wo Mn't cnt tln wedges ,we'ro cuttin boat tfuatg." : "Well why don't you pull strai ght? I can't follow a line with you ."kinning the cat on your end." "My fault agutn, eh?" Mr.' Quirk showed the whites of bis eyes and Ills face grew purple. "l.emme telj you some thing, Tom- - I've stud ied you. careful, as man and boy, for a matter of thirty years, but I never seen you in all your hide outness till this trip. I got you now, though; I got you all added up and subtracted and I'll tell you 'the answer. It's my opinion, backed by flggcrs, that you're a dam " He hestituled, then with a herculean effort he managed to gulp the remainder of the senten ce. In a changed voice he said: "Oh, what's the use? I a' pose you 've got feelin'a. Come on lets get 25 OUNCES 1 kx fHBF for J Scents voice he addressed hiB partner: "If ,you don't get off Chem handles I'll take a stick and knock you off. What you grlnnin' at?" "Why, she's stuck, that's alh Drive your wedge " Jerry's words' ended In an agonized yelp; lie be gan to paw blindly. "You did that a-purpose." . "Did what?" "Kicked sawdust In iny oyca. I saw you!" Mr. Linton's voice when he spolce held thut same sinister note 01 re strained ferocity which had charac terized It heretofore. "When I start kicking I won't kick sawdust into your eyes! I'll kick j our eyes into that Sawdust. That's whut I'll do. omp 'em out like a pair of I'll fU grapes Same Price for over 35 YEARS WHY PAY WAR. PRICES? 7he government used tntllions of-pounds Cd.' "You try It! You try anything with me." Jerry chattered, in a simian frengy. "You've got a had reputation at home; you're a malo hombrc a side-winder, yuu .ire, and your bite is certain death. Thai's what they say. Well, ever see a Mexican hoir cat a ruttkr? That's me wild hog!" " 'Wild hog.' What's wild ubout I you?" h nee red the other. "You picked tho right animal but vhc wrong variety. Any kind of a hog I makus a bad partner." , Kor a time the work proceeded in ; Bilence, then the latter speaker re ' sumed: "You said I was a. dam' something or other. What was ft?" The object of this inquiry main tained an offensive, nay an insult ing, silonce. "A what?" Unton persisted. ; Quirk looked up through hb 1 musk of sawdust, "ir you're get I tin' tired again why don't you nay so? I'll wait while you rest." Hi opened his eyes In uppureiit iw tonlKhment, then hu cried: "Hello! Why, It's raining." ! Jit ain't raining," To declar ed. 'Must be your face Is wet." once more the speake.' cackled Hhrilly In n manner u. tended to be mirthtul, but which wis w rea li ty insulting beyond li u rnu n endurance. "1 never saw moisture on your brow, Tom except when ii rained or when you set too close to a fire." What wuh It you wanted, to call me and was scared to?" Mr. Linton urged, venomously. "A dam what?" Oh, I forgot the precise epi thet I had In mind. But a new onr rises to my lips 'most every min ute. I think 1 aimed to call you a dam' old fool. Something like that." Slowly, carefiily, Mr. Union descended from the scaffold, lea ving the whip-saw in Its place. He was shaking with rage, with weakness, und with fatigue. "Old? Me old? I'm a fool, I admit, or I wouldn't have lugged your loads and done your "work the way 1 have. Hut, you see, I'm strong and vigorous und I relt sorry tor a tottering wreck like you" "Lugged my loads?" snorted the smuller .man. "Mo a wreck? My Gawd!" ' " I did your packing und your washing and your cooking, and mine, loo. just because you was feeble und because I've got con Miureauon ior my seniors. J wus raised that way. I honored youi age. Jerry. I knew you was u bout u It in, but I never culled yn old. I wouldn't hurt your feelings. What did you do? You set around on your bony hips and criticized und picked at me. Uut you've picked my last feather off Mini I'm plumb raw. ltight here we fpHt!" .b-rry fjulrk sintrtrred Hllchtly and leaned against a post for sui port. Ills knees were wobbly; he, too, ached in every. bono and muscle; he too, had been goaded Into an insane temper, but that which maddened him beyond ex pression was this unwarranted churge of Incompetency. 1 "Split it Is." he agreed. "That ll lake a load off my shoulders." "We'll cut our grub fifty-fifty, then I'll hit you a clout with the traces and turn you a-looses" Jerry was still dazed, lor his world had come tat an end, but he pretended to an extravagant joy and .managed to chirp: "Good news the fiisi I've had since we went pardners. I'll -eure kick up my heels. What'll we do with the boat?' , "Cut her In two." "Itlght. We'll toss up for ends. We'll divide everything the aame way, down to the skillet. ! ' livery blame' thing Linton agreed. Side by side they set off hea vily through the woods. Qiiuirrebj similar to this were of daily occurrence on the trail, but especially common were the here at Linderman, for all the devices of the devil I he. one most trying to human putience is a whip-tLw. It is a saying in the North that to know a man .one muht eat at a sack of flour with him; It is also generally recog nized that a partnership ' which survives the vexations of a saw- pit is time and weather proof a predestined union more sacred und more perfect even than that of mju.trimoiiy. few indeed have stood the test. It wus in this loosening of sen timental ties, in tho breach of iriendships und the birlh of bitter enmities, where luy' the deepest tragedy of the C'hllkoot and the Jhllkat trails. Under ordinary, L'ireumstunces men of opposite temperaments may live with each jlher in harmony o.nd died In -nutuul accord, but' clrcumstun- es here were cxtradionnry . . - . Come to Our Bug Depot M I114 Jeffenoa At. All Stages Leave from There Dally. , LEAVES IiA GRANDE FOR . Jwwph A.M. . t P.M. .4100 P.M.) Bund;, I A.M. 4:00 P.M. Baker 7 A.M. 10:M A.M. . 1:10 P.M. . 4 P.M. Kuntlaj 10 AJI. - 4 P.M. j-iuiilleUm Daily 11 AM. - 4i00 PM. Depot Phone Mala TM cemed in the great change had come over him. I Pierce Phillips made no effort I to dceclve himself'; ho was In ' love, yes desperately in love, and j nis HiiuiuHuun sicw wnn i-vu) hour. II vim his first serious af fair and quite naturally Kb new- al- fnchs look his breath. Ho had normal hardship, monotony, I heard of puppy love and he scorn atigue score the very soul; con- cd it, but this was not that kind, .tanl close association renders he told himself; his was an epic men absurdly petulunt and child- adoration, a full-grown, death shly quarrelsome. Many are the less man's affection such as leartuches charged against those comes to none but the favored of any days and those early trails, the gods and then hut once In a. Of course there wis much less lifetime . The reason was patent nternal friction In oulllts like ; it lay In the fact that the object-, .virby's or the Countess Courtcau's of his soul-consuming worship wnere mo men worked under or- l was not an ordinary woman. No, the Countess was cast in heroic hold and she Inspired love or a character to match her individ uality: she was one of those rare. flaming creatures the like, of the loop highway. Including sum- The Turk's Hunday conies on mer homo colonies up the moun, I PrMay. putting them two days a-, tains. Throe-year contracts were head of us In eating loo much. . mude at f 1 .BO a month minimum rate. The company is called the Mount Hood Electric company, and the electricity will bo obtained from the Bull Hun' power plant, lit is also said the' lights are to be put In at onceand that a big trans former will be put In at Bandy. What Are Processed Eggs? Eggs whose shells a,re coated to prevent air from entering through the pores. Air is destructive to quality fruits and vegetables will spoil when held, under the , influence of air. By excluding the air and sealing Jthem they keep indefinitely. So will the egg meat. . PROCESSED EGGS are seal with a coat of paraffine base oil. The meaU are kept sweet and fresh, because they are kept in cooiers 'they are marked "cold storage." TRY THESE EGGS And be convinced that they are of superior quality, 'i'hey should not be confused with common "storage eggs," which carry a storage flavor, nor with so called "fresh eggs'' among which are found stale and rots. Every Egg Guaranteed Sound , And Swecl. . Union Creamery Cd. tcrs, but 'even there relations were often strained. Bol It Dan ny iloyal and I'lerce Phillips had had their troubles, their problems nobody could escape them--. out ( their l tne wnoie they had heldiwhoin lllumlniite the pnes of men together pretty well . history. She was ' another Cleo- iind had made Past progress, all i putra, a regal, matchless crea thlns considered, ltoyal had ex-; ture. " - prnenee 10 uraw upon, wnne Phillips had' none; nevertheless, the Countess was a eood coun selor and this brief training in' authority was of extreme value lo the younger, rnnn, who devel oped some of tho qualities of leuderKhtp. As a result of their frequent, conferences, a frank, Tree Intimacy had sprung up be tween Pierce and his employer, in Intimacy both grutiiylng and disappointing to him. Just how it affected the womjun he could not tell. As a maiter of fact he made little effort to learn, being for the moment too deeply con- To be sure, she was not at all the sort of woman he hud ex pected to love, therefore he loved her the more; nor was she the sort he hud chosen as hie ideal. But It Is thbf abandonment of old Ideals and ' acceptance of new which1 signalizes youth's evolu tion into mnturlty. . (To be continued) I,lr t Hclt, r Contracts Obtained. KANUY, Ore. Contracts for tho Installation of electric lights have bnen obtained from residents east ot the Sandy city limits all along Grouse and Deer Season Is Open -. ; . ) 12 Gauge High Base : "; Shells ..............$1.40 12-Gauge Low Base Shells .....$1.25 Rifle Cartridges in ad sizes I have the kind that gets the game. ' F. L. LILLY Hardware Phone M-f5 saving RADIO Radio reception is get ting better every night. Nova is the time to get your new B-BATTERIES AND TUBES We hsve Just rrceivefl n large shipment of TuIm-h nnd Butteries and can sup ply your needs. Telephone your orders to MAIN l:4 sn-i we will deliver to your llOIII!. La Grande Electric Co. Makes Foods Taste Better t T t ? ? ? ? t f ? ? ? t t I Groceries Meats ATTENTION! 1,5X8,700 PoundH Fresh Meals ,")0 1,000 Pounds Cured Meats Asa ! 0 2,092,700 Better than Two MILLION Found of Meats Sold Last Year! win? Because we maintain the best storage and cooling facilities in Eastern Oregon, which is absolutely necessary in ridding fresh meats of the animal heat immediately after slaughter. Freshly killed meats are not only less palatable, but quito frequently cause disintcry. Age is an important factor in prime meats. . Because of the excellent quality, and low price. Because our Hams and Bacon are of a mild cure and you purchase at a wholesale price. FRESH FROM SMOKEHOUSE EVERY WEEK Sugar Cured Hams 30c Lb. Sugar Cured Shoulders - .'. 18c Lb. L Sugar Cured Cottage Butts (Hams) 2Hc Lb. Sugar Cured Bacon Backs ...3fc Lb. Breakfast Bacon, Sugar Cured from 38c to 4."c Lb. , None better every pound guaranteed first class. i Grande Ronde Meat Co. City, Hoover and Economy Markets Groceries Meals Cash Does Count! Everyone knows the purchasing power of . ready money and it is just as potent in the grocery business as elsewhere. Those who buy only for cash personally select the things they buy.' Thcymake close compari sons and are careful of their purchases. They are keen, discriminating shoppors. They expect better values are entitled to them and they get them. Try it for a month. Go on a cash basis shop at Skaggs Stores and notice how many nice things you can buy with the money you save. AV "have turn T ? f t ? ? t y ? ? ? ? V t 5 ?i ? ? ? ? ? ? y ? Y Y Y y Y Y X Miscellaneous 2 No. 2V cans Libby's fancy sliced pineapple .B5c 2 No. 2'i cans broken slices pineapple .. ' 45c 10 tall cans Carnation or Borden milk t 09c 1 case, 48 tall cans Federal milk $1.59 10 small cans Van Camp's Fork and Beans 79c 3 medium cans Van Camp's Fork and Beans 29c 2 large cans Van Camp's Fork and Beans 39c 10 lb. can lied Karo syrup 89c 10 lb. Blue can Karo 79c 10 Ibf can Skaggs Cane & Maple Syrup - $1.09 10 lb. can pure honey $1.49 5 lb. can pure honey 7nc (i0 lb. can pure honey $7.(9 2 2' lb. cans Hunt's Supreme peaches .. 05c 4 2Vi lb. cans apricots 99c 2 lb. can Mothers Cocoa ...... :45c 1 lb. can Mothers Cocoa 25c 12 lb. can Mothers Cocoa 15c 5 lb. box Perfection Soda Crack- ers .. 54u Flour & Ceareals Ramonia Flour, per sack :...$2.29 Per bbl $9.09 Oregon Beauty Flour, per sack $2.19 Per bbl.' ..$8.69 None To Equal, per sack.... $2.09 Per bbl. :...$8.29 Scratch Feed, per cwt. $3.99 9 lb. sack White or Yellow Meal 45c 9 lb. sack Farina 49c 9 lb. Fine or Coarse Graham.- 49c Mothers Aluminum Oatst per pkg. '. 35c Carnation Premium Oat or Wheat Flakes ...39c 2 Packages Shredded Wheat .......2!c 9 lb. Sack Potlatch Pancake Flour .. G9c Netted Gem Potatoes, per cwt. $2.50 Good Solid Cabbage, per cwt.. $2.50 Good Apples, per box. 75c Canning Pears, per box. $2.49 2 lb. Roll Creamery Butter $1.05 We Pay Delivery Charges on $2.50 or More ! Money Saving Oregon SKAGGS Cash Stores UNITED STORKS Washington Idaho Wyoming Utah Nevada California SI