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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1926)
Page Four EX GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER Friday, August f, 1926. (Incorporated) An Independent Newspspci FHANK B. APPLEBY Editor and Publisher mitVBY v itlATTHEWH Uuslnoss ManuKcr Publluhed evening., ocopt Hundtty, ut HIO AdunnA venue La Orniido, Oregon, The Observer-Star published uvei-y Krlduy. Entered ut the Postofflcn ut La, Orundu, Orok-on, n Second Clans Mull Malt . under uct of March 1. 1117k Ol-'I-'lUIAL PAPKU Ol UNION COUNTY ANIJ TUB CITY 'IV LA OHANOIS JIIOAIUEn ASSOCIATED I'ltKHH The Associated Press la exclualvoly entitled to uso for pub lloatlon of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited If published therein. All rights of republication of special dispatches In this papor, und uloo II. o local news here in also nro reserved 1 HUIISCHU'TION ItATKd ' lly Carrier Pally, per month In advance...... 750 Dully, per six months Im udvuncu !3Z!!"Ti.iO bally, siut'le copy............ ., M ...io II Malt Dally, per month In advance... UalJy, per six months In advance , Jinlly, per year In advance , Weekly Obsurver-Ktar. per yeai ...60o 12.60 -,...r..jo- - ti-OV AUVEKTIHINO HATES Display, fnreli-n, per column Inch Display, local, per column lunh Time contract rates on application. OFFICE CAT ta mam aia. When qi I ji f I ra n d. o muii wns uukvA why lio didn't drown his Borrow, h h;i Id : Ml Iccu uho di c'a too Kooit u- Hwlininrr." walking Ih IJI lila favorite form of roiToaltuii. Tho furm houmV liHcir Ik tin t 1 j a 11 if since ('ofonel John t fonlidye, father of tin m'IfJin'. died In fit March. .Minn Aurora I'lercc, liouitckeoper for the cot onol, continue ai lior pout, un l even the, fiirn lull hum urn uu they were, except for tlm otl lump un der whOKO Ihrht Mr. t'oolidKH to k the oath nf ufflec im president tliron youru uko, Thin Iium haen taken for safe ROBBERS. COPS IN GUN BATTLE were ttavt'd. ' Tin low,. rittimiited at from IfiiiiMi to $ii.omo, H par tially covmrd hy hiHUiui.ee. keeping for iinr,. i nr IH,in HUcknty, executor of the catul My friend She thlnkH that tho hemlock Ik an former (lovui nni the attachment for h o whiff much Inc. j 0(,raajon A2a ...... oc Till-: LOItl OUIt (.Gl "The Lord our (iod pr H tvvtl us h. all thn way Th.-niure will we al.so H-r.-tlie Lord; for lie in our Ood." Jos. 24:1 7,u. Tin lli'lix nf I'rocrflwlliiallnii "Mr. Meunl-to" hitu u comrade, Ami his nunv In "Oidn't-do." llnvf you ever ch;inred to meet them? I 'Id they ever call on you? '('bene Iwo fellowH livfl tOKf'ther lu i he hoiiHc of '.Nev(r-U'in." And I'm told that II I haunhM liy tho KltoHta of "MIr-IH-liave-hef-ii." Skipper (whiler of 1010) New York, ahoy! Where's the popu- allon? ! 'Tni the caretuker. TOveryonn Ihc has Rfine to l'lorlda." ,' - Manv a nmn toseu .IiIh lialnnce when hltt wife not'H 4lioppintr. I 1 She (head on his Nlimihlcr) : Voiit slHtiihlcr Is so sort. lie: So Is your head. . ! la (he hollyhock' the puwnhrok- er'M favoilto flower?.' v " , Wo ran reminher' when n hnthhiH' milt revealed morn , than an ordinary tn-cl cHlume. I'i-hinir mid IthiclK'iT.vJn. I'nahle to retddt lonffer the call of hia fHVorltft Hport, 1'reHident foolidffo went fhthlnK today. II. tried IiIh luck In 1'lncy Hollow hrook, nhout a qmtter of u mile from tho 'oolidtro farmhouH". Meanwhile. Mrs. CoolldK took n pail and went blueherryinff. EX-PACIFIC COAST CHAMPION IS DEAD HPOKAN'I',', Auk. (1 (AI'). Word of the death of Hernial Walsdiirf, In ' I'uelfle roast :iinateur boxing champion nt 1 L"i lollllils, lias been received hi-r-' by hit parents. He was folin-l lead yesterday near a nillruail track at Hire. Minn., where h" wein last month. Ills body was bb'nliried by n medal he won with the ImxinK Htle, This society of pipe smokers is it good idun. Jt is pioli nbly beinfr encouraged by tv large group of wives with sensitive nostrils. I FRIENDS FIND I "CAL" THE SAME (Continued from Tape t) A RECORD AUT0M01JILK YEAH. Automobile production is by no means an infallible in dex to trade conditions, for the makers are human and optimistic to boot. Dut the efforts of the producing com panies are stimulated or diminished by anticipations based on thorough-going study of .basic trends, and they may, therefore, be regarded as reflecting about the best opinion iivailablc. t. In the first six months ,of 1926 the American motor industry set a new high record for output with 2,176,281 . passenger cars and 272,903 trucks, and although June and July have shown the expected recession from peak produc tion the shrinkage is less conspicuous than that of a year ago. In recent years production from January to July has approximated 53 per cent or the 12 months' total and that from July to December 47 per cent. If 1926 proves a nor mal year, this country will produce more than 4,600,000 ears and trucks before December 31, and present business conditions. .ud crop prospers "''"UUi'l&J... pL'iUiml'WCi V. . , ' , , 'W The industry as a whole was never in better shape fi nancially. A record season seems 'assured. Its influence upon other industries which supply raw materials and parts, fuel and tires, will go fur to assure many months of that reasonable prosperity which is the best kind of all. , NO CANCELLATION. Secretary Mellon's letter in defense of the government's position in regard to debt cancellation will go far to clarify the situation both in this country and abroad. Ho argues against cancellation on broad grounds, and although tho same statement might, perhaps, have soi-vcd a more useful purpose had it been issued months or even years ago, it is still timely. The secretary points out that the European countries which have obligated themselves to make payments on these loans have been asked for much less interest than the United States is paying on the same money to its own citi zens; that the voluminous Wilson correspondence which -preceded the advance of money makes plain that these loans were not regarded as gifts or designed as such; that much of the money was paid over after the signing of the armistice and was borrowed to meet domestic rather than military needs. He is quoted partially in the New York Times as follows: H is clear that when the advances wore made to our allies they knew and we knew thev were loans not gifts. . . .It must bo remembered that Eng land borrowed a largo portion of its debt to us Jor purely commercial as distinguished from war purposes to meet its commercial obligations matur ing m America, to furnish India with silver, to buy food to be resold to its civilian population, and to maintain exchange. Our loans to England were not so much to provide war supplies as to furnish ster ing fur homo and foreign needs and to save England Irom borrowing from its own people. . Wo must collect through taxation from (un people H our debtoi-s do not pay to us what they can. . . Neither generally from the people, the press, nor at all from the chosen representatives of the people in congivss has come this demand (for I cancelation). . . . Hut I feel that a recogni tion ol their external obligations bv the European nations and an 1 1 n,l,.i t L-i,,.,,.,i,'. ,i ... . , . .itiei.i hi liu-t'l llll'lll within their capacity as each country has done is a moral force of great service to permanent pros pority m the world. . . . i).,, as tle financial sky now appears, I believe Europe is today closer to a permanent sound solution of its economic trou bles than at any time since the war. ... 1 do not despair of Europe. There must, of course, always bo those who for senti mental or other reasons will hold that cancellation would have been not only graceful but also the proper policy, but the time for considering such action is passed. Further i.gitation to this end can only serve to postpone some kind of settlement and in view of the political crisis in France, and conditions in half ; dozen other countries, a settlement of terms of repayment is really more important than the erms themselves. We have already been generous fur more generous than wo could expect European countries lo bo under sinu'lar circumstances and i recognition of their remaining obligation to ua is long past duo, I went lu Hie public library evor; j day and 1 thinU he rend every imiuii in ii, i ill a just ueitire uurt lie wmtld walk around the park near the library." j Turns (o Fislilnu. The president hail lately turn.'il lo flslilm? with I'litliiiHlaMiii, but CII-XJII'ION CVCLIST Kll.l.i:i) HKATTI.H. Auk. II (AI'). I'liesler . Mills, lit, a' Siutfc -cyclist, una killed last lilftlit u le-li his wheel collided will! nil ante driven by I'ornellus. Vei-haiiini Jr.. IS. Mills won t lit' I'aeific coaHt :'", mile bicycle ruud championship ;:i Vancouver, II. ('. Wednesday, an 1 was prarllrinu; at the tlm aeeldfiil. NEW TOItH, Ailif. i. (AP) Patrolman Oscar Oehkerllni?. 28, was killed and a man who describ ed himself as Albert Mack, recent ly arrived rrom Louisville, Ky.. probably wus. fatally wounded early today In a pllelied battle that followed a cafe robbery at the edxe of the llioadway white liKht section. Two men entered the former lie used saloon of Jerry t'ronln. on ll'lll SI i t just west of Broadway, and lined up si . customers. The robbers Kot only from tht-i till. Patrolman OidilkiTllns; arrived In time lo see tlie nu n leaving ami opi ned fire. He usi'd a taxleall lis a shield and the driver crouched on the floor of the car. The roldiers barricaded themselves behind bricks from a IiuIiIIiik under con struction. other officer ran lo the .scene and joined Hie buttle, which s-t-llnl Into a steady fusilade.. tlehlkerlinir and Mack were wounded almost simultaneously and put into the same taxicah. The Ol'l'lei r dlrd on Ihe uprrntillK table I at Knoscvfll hospital. Polee said Mark confessed to . robbing the resaurant hut denied ' In- shot the ol'I'leer. The st-eond j ( rubie r escaped. , Gangland Feud Adds Another to Death List flMCAOO, AllB. 6 ( AP). An- olht r death nnd a sholjrun volley . which seriously wounded hut did, not kill an Intended victim, both within an hour last nlKlit, were charired hy police today to si rife in t ho illicit liquor traffic. Milan Dyllck's reputed activity as u police informant, partic ularly nn dry law violations was be lieved hack of his death from u rifle bullet us he sat in his home in suburban llaiselcrest. KM t'lltlii liik. who was arrested, denied knowledge of the killlnu. I'if- n minutes later (lus Musruroiio fell, seriously wounded before a volley of shotgun slugs, as tlie frull dealer stepped from a street corner near his home. Throe men were arrt'Sted as oceupaiils of III. shootlnil iiiltomolille from wlllcn Miiscarelio was fired upon. Hart Schaffner & Marx "The Mark of Leadership" N. K. West & Co. Store For Men Missing: Aviators Are Safe in Rio Grande lil KS'Orf AlliKS. Auk. 0 (AIM. La Nucct-n's Kio (i run do do Sul f'orreHpomient reports that :or i.ardo luiifKan and Ids fellow :ivi-iilrt-H, miyainif sinci' Monday, ar 1 1 i d th.Tc unexpectedly today. A ' method for usin aluminum in making wall paper Iuim heeii devlned hy SwI.sh manufacturers. It i-.t it vs. I'KXDI. KT .V, A II ( A P ) . l-'lr.- HtnrthiK in a barn helonKinir lo Kluii-r Moore, Hi iiiih-s noriu enst of IVndleton. completely de stroyed the sllllrMlie, lull tons Ol ol" the hny and some i implements ami hiiinesM. tvn hor.siM lit rho ha Big Saturday Night DanGe August lnih laat day to pay your water rent .without n penalty.. S-C-.lt Tin the quick ' and cool way lo chase ihirsl away Xi:V OPKX Allt I'AVII.IDX Elgin, Saturday, Aug. 7tli Oant'c to the 3lui. nf the Toitinn - ohi:s ".lut .Valurall.v Hot" T FvE E T E A .ORANCE PEKOE i! 111 I Double your ' fun with a BROWNIE Prices Brownie cameras are just as simple as tfiey look you'll get good pictures from the word "go". That's easy to prove. YVe have pictures here that will show you.' Kodaks $f up Developing, printing mU eiiUnjiaf oC ts quslhr hind Red Gross Drug Store . Schilling Baking Powder raises a cake with myriads of fine, light, fluffy bubbles, y Cream of tartar . always gives that fine even -texture that no substitute has ever been able to equal. 1 made from luscious grapes c h i 1 1 i n s AEA, (coiSeei Piking fowder e x t r a c t s PICl;' comes in till pound (16 oz.) tin'sj V When the kiJdies come rushing in at lunch time oral'tcr school. ..StRVE THEM TOAST. Tu.st Iniikb strong bodies and healthy minds. Toast is easy to make on the NEW Toast -Over Toaster The toast is turned auto matically. And a conve nient switch in the cord allows turmnu the cur rent on or off at will. Step in Today See thii great value .'6 H. & S. Electric Co. Oxfords and Slippers In all sizes, infants' to 1(5 years. At Lowest Prices for Better Grade Shoes. DRESSES, size Hi to -10. Regular $5.05 to lie closed out at special iow )riee....$3.95 ALL SUMMER HATS at One-Half . Price 123 To Sj?1.9S BOYS' CAPS, size G to 7 ..-19? BLOOMER DRESSES 98 VOILE DRESSES, size 2 to 10 ?1.49 50c COLORED VOILE, special at 35 Yard KHAKI OUTING SUITS, age 2 to 6....$1.25 KHAKI OUTING SUITS, ape 7 to 14 $1.50 All Discontinued Stock, valued $1 to $6 to be closed out at Special Low Prices 25 To ?1.9S Norton's Kiddy Shop Infants' and Children's Vearables First Showing TODAY Special Equipped FORDS With wire wheels and other accessor- ies made in the Ford factories i All Closed Model Now Have The one ord-T mi Adds new beauty and gives a com plete permanent finish over the entire car. Fenders remain finished in baker! enamel. Perkins Motor Co. Main 500 La Grande, Ore.