SaturdayJuly 13, 1929
Page Four
LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE, ORE.
$5a fetitbc faming (DbserBcr
(Incorporated)
An Independent Newspaper
FRANK B. APPLEBY Editor and Publisher
HARVEY F, MATTHBW3 BiHlnPWH Mnnaer
Published evenings, except Sunday, at 141G A da ma Avenue,
La Grande, Oregon. The Observer-Star published every Friday.
Kntered at the PoMtoffice at La (iranlt, Oregon, an Second
Clans Mall Matter iind-r net of Marfh 2, 1H70.
OFFICIAL l'AI'KIi OF UNION COUNTY AND THI3
CITY OF LA (JRAN'I'JJO
MKM UK II OF ASSOCIATION PRIMS
The Aflsoelated Pre.s.s Is exHunlvelv wiltli-d to who for publica
tion of all news dlupaleheH eredited u It or not otherwise credited
If published beri-ln. All rlgbla of venuMlriition of Hpeciul dis
patcher In til Ls mur, und also the local news herein also are
reserved ,
r 1 " -
National Advertising Representative
M. C. MOOKNtfKN & CO., Inc.,
San Francisco, Los Angeles, Scuttle, Portland, Chlcngo,
lflfolt. New YofU
SUHSCRII'TKt.V It A TICS
Jly Carrier
Dally, per month In advance
Dully, six months In advance
Daily, HlriKle copy ,.,
Ily .Mall -
Dally, per month in advance
Dully, per hIx montlm In advance
Dally, per year In advance ...
Weekly Observer-Mmr, per yenr
, mini nm
mi
7r.o
$I.D0
.. 5a
60c
K'.&o
5.00
J2.00
ADVICHTIHiNO RATIOS
DlHpluy, fortflcn, per column Inch
DiHpluy, local, per column Inch....,,
Time rnntrnnf yrft on nppllciillnn.
4 2o
4110
IXTICU.KIICNT I'lIA YI-:u WIhmi yo prjiy, ww not vnln i-cpc-UtliuiK,
mh the hciilhi'i) rlo: fur ilitv think thnl ihey .h;ill he
licnt'il lor their much Klii'oWlllK. He not IIhti'Ioii' like unto
them: fur your r'nlhei-- lunnvelh whnl. IIiIukh ye luive need uf
livtm-c ye unit hhn. .Mntlhew 11:7, K.
FOR BATHING BEACH AND SPORTS
j Mrs. ;aiui Kin never niiend a
' dinner with a mm-IiiI eipial lei' iher
Is no uay o clcfldln' which should
( sit at tin right o the host, an' yoiT
ii ut the ri'iht o the ux, an' yon
know Mrs. (.aim. "1 wii. awfully
: nl'i-iil'l Hii'vM in i inn iff ullli Mic
new in HIT hill, hut I see iiuthpiiil
Kimonos uri still oi the free list
said .loliu KK( today.
Scholarship Is
Considered By
Cove Grangers
I mi 1 1 Hi Mill" 1 1 1 " I ' ji mtiituiiiiniiniitt j
: 1 m
'come with one engine lurnlpg to
the right und the other to the lert.
Too, Marrendy polntH oat, the
plan would have no tendency to
go one side If an engine failed as
j would he the ease were the en
glneu mounted on each side of the
fuselage.
The cabin of the plane, 16 feet
long 5H feet wide and ft feet 2
lneheH high, Ih conrpurntively quiet.
The noise of the engine l carried
. off above the wing by the nir
'tt renin. Conv-erttatlon may be car
.ried on In anordlnary tone.
I The plane Is .13. feet long and
hns a wing spread of 67 feet. Jt
hfif; an estimated high speed of
liiti mile tin hour und a cruieing
ipoed of 140 miles an hour,
j Macready resigned from the
army, in which he held a lieuten
ant's commission, several years ago
after gaining fame as an altitude
j ;i nd long distance flier. He now
lis a captain in the air corps re
' serve, ami assistant wiles manager
J of an electric refrigerator manu
! fncturlng company.
. LIGHT COLORED SHOES .
$4,95-
Any light Colored Shoe in the store.
N. K. West & Co., inc.
La Grande's Leading Store for Over 30 Years
C. J. lireier Chain
Plans Expansion
( i A hop. from one side of the Atlantic to the other will be
commonplace before long- but the exact destination on the
other side isn't being reached with accuracy so far. I.ind-
.bergh headed for Paris and landed light there. More and
more the world is impressed with his ability or luck or plane.
Perhaps a happy combination of all three.
President Hoover has announced that the "Coolidgo econ
omy" program is to be continued in his administration, and
department heads have been warned not to expect to get
more money than they got last year. Kconomy will take a
hlighlly different form from, that which we Jiave som in the
last half dozen years. True economy often calls for the ex
penditure of large sums of money. This is especially so in a
governmental organization, where one dollar spent today can
often save $10 a few years later. Air. Hoover, being an
.engineer, doubtless knows that perfectly. So, we predict, his
economy will not be of the, penny-pinching kind.
' ; . THE SMALL TOWN
y One frequently hear.tho uomplijjnt'oiced bjj very you'jyr,
members of the community, that they are fed up with the
small town and that they longto get out into the big world
'where they could do things and enjoy life to the full.
!' Only experience can teach that these juvenile hopes and
inspirations are in the majority of cases doomed to bitter dis
appointment jn the realization of what the groat outside
;world holds in store. The majority of this juvenile army of
'lungers after life and excitement come to the stage where
'they would give anything to get back to the simpler pleas
ures and real friends of the small town only to find that
;they are carried by a current which renders the backward
swim a feat impossible of accomplishment.
Perhaps the restless youngesters are old enough, and ig
enough, and know enough to care for themselves, but it
usually is the case that those who brag about being able to
care for themselves are the ones who need, the most re
straining. While those who have gone through the experience can
'sympathize with those who chafe at the confines and re
strictions of a "little burg," yet they can assure the young
people of today that they have in that "little burg" nearly
all the things and nearly all the opportunities which the
!oung folks of a couple of decades ago thought they had to
go to the big city to get. Young folks of today have pleas
ures and opportunities many fold greater than those which
were presented to the young folks of yesterday. In the
."little burg" today are all the things that would have made
contented the young folks of yesterday.
, The girl or boy of today who hasn't an automobile in the
family feels that Providence has been very unkind to him.
. In days not so very long ago the two-horse rig that could be
driven with one hand was thought (piite sufficient for a
Sunday afternoon's pleasure. We didn't get quite so far
along on the road but the time didn't drag on our hands mid
the road seemed short enough.
When thorn' now in middle age were young there were no
'moving picture theaters and unless they moved out of the
'little burg" they had no chance to see a good show, but
looking back through the years the little family parties am
taffy pulls, almost never heard of now, seem to have been
far from unpleasant affairs and to have possessed pleasant
features.
We got along pretty well with all our handicaps and there
;was far more socialbility when there were fewer places to go
ihan there is now when even staid folks who were raised
under the more prosaic conditions of a couple of three decades
fago have been partially carried away by the growing craze
for amusement, to be entertained, to lie doing soon-thing anil
to be going somewhere.
Ilv Mrs. ,1, It. Prlen
I OhHcrviT (.'"rrpHtHpnilPtH)
PliVK, Ore, (Ppn-lnl) A ni"Hnn
lo HpiuiKor n Hummel Krhiinl .whiil-
in-Mhip Cur liiiys-nntl kO'Ih whs lint
.Ih'Oh'o iho -.Mt. T'nriny ki-jiiikp' jiI. 1
jtholr rOKiiliir nwotlnK. Thin movi-- j
input Ih lieiliK (IIhciimhpiI ly nil ilio;
'Know in 1'nlnii rnunly. Thi' j
; scholarship will hp luuMi the sninii
.as thiiso nnw i-nfcU'cd IiV-iiiimiiIhts I
luf-lho -iir tluhs fnini vailous' TIAYTO.W Ohio (A I') .Inhn A.
'sun i-H. Tvi ni'-- inemlioi-s were Min'ieuily. former nulfil army flier,
ilnltiatej ami two applications wore l" ilesiKtieil an airplane which he
rcc.iviil. Wray Lawrence, county laUeyes will reduce hazards in a
'aucnl. kiivp a yerv Intcrestlm; talk minimum.
'on infectious ul.orllnn In dairy I ''"' '"" .nislneii of the plane, n
herds. .Mr. and Mrs. W. It. leke- hlKh-wlne cnnlllever monoplane,
ler and Mrs. Wray Lawrence, of '" mounled In tandem above the
(IraiKle were other out -iif-lown wIiir. The overhead niounlinK of
.visitors al the meetlnf. .Mrs. It. S. H'e enl.-lnes, Maerendy says, In
'i;otnslock hail chut-ce of the lee- creases the efficiency of the plane
rime hour and .1. 11. Love sanic "ml provides anfely (Old oomfurt
".My I tiKt.l.v" and "Curry .Me Hack r'"' l'10 passengers.
' i Tennessee" with Kultar accom- j Several flying hoals have lieen
p.-inimcnt. .Mt. Knnny uranm' will equipped with engines n tiindem
close dvirlnii the remainder of .luiy above the wlnp, hut this is the
'and Almost and (he next incelltlK first hih-wlng land plane to he so
jwill be held Sept. 7. . constructed in tills country,
i L. K. Anderson printed. . HI, 000 1 With the entilnes so lilnceil there
curtains for Ihe Cooperative " dnnser ,u passeiiKer wnlk
I'herry (.'rowers and Is printing l,,K lntn 11 whit-linn propeller and
I. '12. 000 for K. .1. staeklanil. air. """fe Is no- ttneomfnrtnhle wind
Htilcldnnd uses the boxes with par- hh'1 ' KetllllK In and out of tho
'Mtlhttrt' -lifrll"liei'i'HTl,Hll',flii' 'cur-' l'1"'"'. . ;
lalns to the box while the cooper-1 The liftlitK efficiency of (he wlnn
alive boxes use but two. Tho Is fnci-eased, Mnel'onily explains, lie
chcrries are ripening (tilte -anldlv
now. It Is reported, anil nlctilnu' ! - "
will liOKin soon. Cherry growers'!
estimate theii crnis as some hctlcr
Ihan last year although thti season
is about (wo weeks later than1
usual.
Mrs. Ktanellfl Is vIsltlnK her I
nl.ee Mis. 10. I-:. Coad. .Mrs. Stan- j
clifl is from California. j
After the rcKtllnr business meet-
Iiik Tuesday cvenhiK inosl of the
Xissakl camp fire fchis went for an '
evctiiiiK swim. It was decided that
they woul.l have a paper chase nl
inelr nest meetlm;.
W. C. Hansen and Chin-lev Cran
dall pf La ilrnuilc. have hccli bulld
Itu; a stone fireplace at Camp Yew
itow. T.hey e.xtiect to have it com
lilcteil by (he I'tlil of Ihe week.
Lower left: A vellow and black hathttiK suit closely trimmed with
strips of white, shown by Honwit Teller, New York. Cpper left: A
Ifaku hut, shown by Lord and Taylon, New York. KiKht: Two-piece
ports crock .of flat crrpe Willi Ideated skirt, exhibited by Krunklln
Sltnon, New York.
Former Altitude Ace Designs New
Plane With Engines Over Wings
HI.AMi;n l-'OK HiAMKS
rsKNI 1, Or. July 1.1 (AT)
.MiunrT luko ran-hors todny wore
hlamiMl fr the fire which lilitrk
vnt't lLMu acron of RrasH and saRO
rush lhi wffl;. (1. !", (irown, ir.ip
iTiHor of tho lrtmont national
forest ha been Invofflipatlnff the
fire.
PORTLAND, Ore.; July 1.1 The
J. Ureter fu. announces that it
Jin amending It nrticleK of incor
poration no n to enable it to float
an issue of stock, which will have
a three-fold pnrpoHe, to provide
j additional capita t for developing
land improving existing store unit,
to neeitre a lot-Re roiip of stock
holder and thus increase It fol
lowing, anil to supply capital for
tho ptirpoKo of extending; the chain,
either, hy ubHorhinr other small
chains and individual , stores, or
expaiHiinff through opening aihll
tional units,
The lireier storett nrp located at
present In 47 wentern cities.
. POTLANI YOl TIf lHOVNi;i
J'OKTLANI), Ore., July. 13 CAP)
(Mwarrt Ayi-es, Hi, Portland, wn
drowned in tliej Randy -river - last
nilit whih' swlmminff. Physicluns
Mjild heart trouble wax tho eunse.
, J tiUit)t, Minn,, is home port for
SAW lake vessels with u tonnfiKe of
7!.4 1. x -
i.r.o (joFN .swfAnnxr.
CO I .OO N K, Uermn ny. ( A P ) - -When
circus played a one iiIkIu
staml at liallay, a- Inre lion hrok
out of his eace and made for tlu
wine country's famous river, the.
Moselle, There he stayed, romping;
deliKhtedlj and nothing would
bring- hlni out. The keepers finally
had to hit lid Iron gratings arouno
the animal, then draff him to shore.
FISH SWRT
l.KXINGTON. N. ('., (AP) This
Is only fish story No. 1,347, tin:.', but
it helps to multe life brighter. Hons
of K G. Kitzjfernld. Lfnwood, set
out noma hook for catfish with
bait near the top. They returned
to find a hug-e owl, the hook sunk
I in Its wins- and Its "body enmeshed
in the line.
run: is coxtiiollko
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore.. July 3
(AP) A forest fire which -covered
an enllre mountain and threatened
the Algoma Lumber .company lust
nfght was under control today after
iMio fire fighters ' wurciI an all-nig-ht
fig-hl.
. KING IS KOiti;j;)
HRrSSKLS. July 13 (Af J
King- Albert, was robbed or his g-obl
watch, a pocketbook containing- fno
francs and a Kold pen knife while
having' an enjoyublu swim in the,
sea at Marlnkerke and today re
turned to Hriiwel anything- but
pleased about It.
(cause the airflow over the lending
edire Is not disturbed by the pro
pellers, and for this reason a lower
(landing- speed Is possible. The flow
I of air from the propeller Is unob
jstrueted, providhiff Increased speed
and maneuverability is Improved
by the air stream being- thrown dl-
Ireetly on the tajl surfaces.
The plane is designed to take
.off and fly on one engine. This
is a vital safety feature, Macready
points nut. Instead of being forced
to land should one of the two
"Wright t'yelone engines cease to
function, the pilot could continue.
With no engine In front the pil
ot. Tins an unobstructed view. Tho
terrain spreads out like a great
map and there Is less lllkellhood of
.petting- off the cnurs In thick
weather.
It The tandem ' arrangement also
makes flying- easier. ' The pilot
does not have to "hold right rud
der" because englnA turfpre Is over-
Good Cold Cream
Modestly Priced
Huge presses, used In the manu
facture of explosives during1 . th
war. now siuee.e out luu.oun miles
of macaroni weekly In Milwaukee.
Weds Man, 79
r
TRY
W. K. GILBERT CO.
FIRS'I1
i !.Si
rl til
I If VSJsk!
pi p i
A , j
I M
I
Marie oiijririiilly for the theatrical profession, Owl
Theatrical Cold Cream has become a favorite with
many thousands of well-groomed pe0P'u.
No cold cream can be purer. No cream is a better
cleanser and skin protector. And the modest price (a I
full pounds Trie) permits you to use it generously
which is the way cold cream should be used.
1 li it r. - r, Ti l
i
Make This Store your
lh ujj sioro.
MOON
DRUG
CO.
You arc always welyomc
to use our phone.
.uriiii;,: of Allis Cnrtt-r, ic.-onli'l!
..-.ua oiii, to Jollll T. Do
"". TU-ycur-ultl Civil wat- vol
'in. ul Mi'it.1. Aik.. 1i,i.h aronsei'
city. Ni-luhlKM-.i
1 Mf. ami Mrs. l.-U( ('at-l.T I
"""H "I tl.o Kill. ,ln. ,,!,,! ,,
I.lil It only
1 "l'l. Tin- iimi. iiIs niKiieil ii'
" '1 l"'i lint for tins issiiau, o of ill
itmiiao to (ho ciiitiile,1
Uuinu ktlOYtf.
New And Interesting Books
For Your Summer Reading
"The Road to Oregon" A chronicle of the great
emigrant trail, by V. J. Ghent $5.00
"The -Mansions of Philosophy" This is the long
awaited companion to the story of philosophy
by Will Durant ! "..$5.00
"lied Tiger" Tales of adventurous travel in re
mote regions, of visits among strange people
etc $5.00
"Attila" (The scourge of God) Here at last the
famous battle of Chalons is described in detail
by Maud 1 Irian $3.50
"The Muck Camel" A Charlie Chan mystery
story by Karl Pur niggers ! $2.00
"Young Airs. Greely" A novel of today by Booth '
Tarkington , $2.00
"Tides" by Kdondard von Keyserling $2.50
"Adios" A glamorous historical romance of Cal
ifornia, by Tho Hartletts $2.50
"This Strange Adventure" by Mary Roberts
Rinehart ...$2.50
La Grande Book & Stationery
Company
1111 Adams Ave.
11 U Adams
We take subscriptions to all magazines
SIX
GOOD
easons
why you should buy
the new Ford car
Triplex shatter-proof glass 'windshield
Silent, fully enclosed six-brake system '
Four Houdaille hydraulic shock absorbers
55 to 65 miles an hour
Vibration-absorbing engine support
Typical Ford reliability and economy
ALL of these features combine with smart, low body lines and a
choice of beautiful colors to make the new Ford an unusual value at
a low price. Call or telephone for a demonstration.
Note these low prices x
told ft er Phttlon Businen Coupe Tudor Sedan Coupe
$450 $460 $525 $525 $550
Sporl Coupe Fordor Sedan
$550 $625
(All frittt f. o. b. Detroit, plus charge (or freight and delivery. Bumpers and
spare lire extra.) v
Perkins Motor Co.
Cur. Fourth & Adams M. 500