Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1930)
Page Foot LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER. LA GRANDE. ORE. Tuesday, Afril 29, 1930 A FIRST SHOVELFUL (iBOorpormced) As Independent Kwiptper PRANK H. APPLXBT . -Editot aod Publisher HARVEY F. MATTHEWS . -Business Manager PublUfaed erenins. except Sunday, at 1414 Adams ATeoue, La Grande, Oregon. The Observer-Star published rery Friday. Entered at the Po toff ice of La Grande. Oregon, as SecoDd Class Mail Matter under act ot March S. 187. OFFICIAL PAPER OF U.VIO.V COCNTT AND TUB CITT OF LA GRANDS MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Tb Associated Preu is exclusively entitled to use for publica tion of ail news dispatches credited to Jt or not otherwise credited if published herein. Ail rights of republication of special dis patches In this paper, and also the local news herein also ar reserved. National Adrertiifnr Representative M. a J40GESSi:.V CO, Inc. Ban Francisco, Lot Acgeles, Seattle. Portland. Cblc&ffo, Detroit. New York SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier Dally, per aaonth In advance Dally, six months la advanc uaijy. single copy . 76c By Mail Dslly. per month In advance . Dally, per six months la advance . Day 7. per year In advance - Weekly, Observer-Star, er year . . ioc -ti.vo -15.60 JJf.GO ADVERTISING RATES Display, foreign, per column inch ,, ,. uispiay, local, per column men Time contract prices on application. THE RIGHTKOUH ONJ Therefore, as iy the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even fco by the' rishteoutnis vt one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life. J tomans 5:18. La Grande's census total of 8043, making; it the only city in Eastern Oregon in the eight thousand class, is gratifying! even though the thickly populated areas immediately outside the corporate limits cannot be included. Although the growth outside has been so great that one grade school has been built just beyond the' legal boundary; the growth per centage is over 16. In only one classification has Baker excelled they have 63 farms within the city limits and today's report shows La Grande has but three. i i 4 tablespoons flour. 1-2 tt-aspoon salt. 1-4 teaspoon pepper. 1-4 teaspoon celery silL 2 cups water or su-at or fowl stock. s 2 i-inr yolks, well b-aten. 1 tablespoon linon juice. 1 tablespoon buiu-r. Mult four tablespoons of butter and add flour, salt. iiper, clery sail, water. Cook until creamy auce forms. Stir frequently. Add Sff yolks and boat well, slowly add lemon juice, beating steadily. Add UtbU-Apoon of butter and beat one minuu; over moderate fire. This sauc is esiR-cially sup Keated for serving on hot asnara KUS. VisrtMe Salad llrvsin (For bead letiuco or vegetable salads) 1 teaspoon salt. 2 teaspoons sugar. 1-4 teaspoon paprika 1-4 leanpoon dry mustard. 4 tablespoons vine-gar. 1-2 cup chilled salad oil. 2 tablespoons catsup. 1-4 cup finely chopped onions ; 1-4 cup chopped cooked carrots. 1-4 cip chopped celery. Mix and chill ingredients. Beat' one minute and serve on crisp , salads. ; Chocolate Ixwf Cnku (With sour cream) 4 tabu-spoons fat. . j 1 cup sugar. j 1 cgc i 1 teaspoon van" Ha. 1-4 tea-spoon salt. 2 squares chocolate, 2-3 cup sour cream. 2 cups flour. melted. 1 teaspoon soda. 1-3 cup broken nuts. Cream fat ond sugar. Add other ingredients and beat three minutes. 'our in loaf pan lined with - wuxc-d Iaper. Hake 35 minutes in mod erately slow oven Half lemon juice and half lime juice substituted for vinegar used in French dressing gives a tasty dressing for fruit or vegetable salads. FIXAL COUXT SHOWS GAIN 16 PER CEXT (Continued from Page One) , Sympathy for the French people because of the burden they carried during the war may be slightly misplaced. An nouncement of the new budget in France shows the national j debt to be 8466 per capita, while in England the ner canita i debt is 830-the greatest of any people on earth. France ll"'''''""" ' is prospering sufficiently to pay off a 75 million dollar debt' 11 ' ep?cti t tike tm-rai to Swedish bankers, to announce a tax reduction of an equal "LwT-S amount for next year. England, on the other hand, is forced " reieam-ci us .irriciai. tho to increase taxes to meet war cosU and post-war condi- lu?!!..?":, tions, Ia Grande people visiting In other . s towns and not counted here, are , included in this city's total on tho A FRENCH PICTURE OF AMERICA of returns from the town in You cease to wonder at the peculiar impressions foreigners runun have of this country when you read such reports as that recently include .McMinmiiio of Mile. Marie Chaptal. delegate to the League of Nations Ttc'-.hVk.Vi Welfare Committee. She says of what must have been a very brief visit to this country: "I encountered such depths of misery, moral and physical, as would appalL the most, experienced social., workers . kJ A great deal of child delinquency is due to the prohibition law. Parents break the law and arc inveterate drinkers.. .The child becomes accustomed to see the law disoleyed . . . The very base of family life is different in the United States from that in older countries. About half the population have no religious leliefs at all. The home is merely a place for m sleeping, or, occasionally, eating ... Hygiene takes the place wo.rM Career Is Closed total. u. S. NAVAL DELEGATION -IS WELCOMED (Continued from Pago One) Ambassador Morrow, w ho 4 r w IDAHO COLLEGE j BASEBALL TEAM HERE TOMORROW i TRACE PARENTAGE OF MYSTERY BABY (Continued from Page One) T Vtf W (Continued from Page One) Horn and fans are anticipating a worthwhile afternoon. K. O. X. Goliu? to Monmouth Following tne game, the Coyotes will go to Walla Walla Tor a three game series with Whitman college. rand the Mountaineers will go to i Monmouth for two games Friday ; and Saturday with ..Normal school. These two games : will be the first conference uon j tents of the season, j Monmoilth will come to Ia j Grande May 12 and 13 for two games and Whitman college will I be (hcre Saturday, May . 17. rity but ran out of funds and took a job at a lumber camp at Veneta where she stated he worked under the name of Harold Browne. Tho woman said she was the daughter of a man in the U. S. forestry ser- ' .vice, one of s:ven children and that two of her sisters hid taken prizes in beauty contests. She said as soon as her husband ' accumulated -enough money he intended to re- J turn to his law studies. ' The baby was born at Pacific' - - A itmtta'.ed -Prrtt Ph-lm Mrs. Guy Bates Post, former wife of the stage star and an actress of note a few years ago, was found dead in the home of Mrs. Doris M. Palmer whose, body was also discovered. Police gave tho theory Mrs. Post killed Mrs. Palmer and then ended her own life at Laguna Beach, Cal. I Menus Of The J tv ' M- r . "ay i : : h , i j tie .oauy was it .tit f.urcMip Jchrifvtiaii. hospital J-iugene. Novi ni- J ber 7, tho woman stated and ih'-i doetor was J Jr. Charles K. Hunt, j The couple remained at the lodg- ing house some time after the baby was born and during 'December ' disappeared riding. , in a green so- j dan. Tho blankets, she safd. dis appeared with them. A short time afterward she read of the baby be ing fouiul on thu Salem doorsUrp. ling Slid: i "It is a good treaty, a good treaty for the l ulled .Stat ex, a -p forward In the movement foe. ' Kt:n-trd for cilv hall led bv a no- ,r - l.. tu it. lit ii i . i wcniary numson is entllien to .lt u.,n, i Of morilI. PhVKIPUl hnnlth iuhoc iranntninn nimf ' . . , . . . ... - ... : lice DJnd. -...rw.. ,..,.v. ji.vi.uvii miiovkjuvu inn nigneHt credit lor aceompiisn- j ...The human soul does not seem to be regarded as a " K al"'"?'"r1 V'''!! '''7'""",' ii.iT-wi!i "u'"sn"m ..x",t for I-, tt i Homer nt the ibdi-gation abroad. . . . J . living reality." . ,iy hiBh ,.ara. t..r. i,iK Br.at i;:.h;,7'',K.froT " BIOU" " All of these things will be found true in isolated portions !;;r..n, mCT.TiI ti,.'i at ci.y i,m. ia.,t ; of the country. It would be peculiar in any nation of 120 I hi. i'oii. ubu h-ii." on ih. j .n,,out ,l,'1',y '"inu",s- JO- i'1' v- million people if such an impression could not be gained if !"lr,","1 "vlw;"on- "" of ! ";f"Cr "n" j. wai."';- yOU Were looking for it. Hut Mlll. Chuntnl .innm-anflv i... who is III i mn iiitH ueen a very Hy .Mrs. Alexander t.'fNiruo si-itixt; iim;u mk.nu liroiled 1-iinb Chops j Hundred .Vt-w Poiator.t J Kroccoli and Mock Jlollandat.se Sauco J tread Grape. Jam Lead Lettuce and Vegetable Dressing Chocolate Cake and Coffee oclieves that this report is characteristic of the United States as a whole; at least the text gives that impression. The trouble is that her investigation was' made largely in New York; our most foreign city. There, as everyone knows, prohibition enforcement is most lax and violation most prevalent. There can be found the worst slum condi tions in the countrythe greatest variation in moral stand- leomod the delegate. ' Ili'aponKCK were made by Secretary ii'iutr ti.-.,,. r. ..ii g i i .-"niiiKon iiiiu rtenaior itomnson. oanoK w ciriieii so mu d that HtlmHoii sjiid. scarcely saw tht-m and .. feel as though W'-'il have to be inlrodiired to them all over again. Our part wan making thvm a comfortable as pOSHible. "Mr. Stlmsnn Is very tind but hi 'H not half so tird as he would aids. But New York is no more typical of the rest of . .rv,., """ ' "r"'"'"1 " IJiglMi I'eopl,- l Mliiriil Mr.. Kobliison s,iid the wivs of After the I'l-nmoni's Mr. Milm- son. Secretary Adams. Senator llobiiiyon and members of their party w-re driven to the Pennsyl vania station, where a special train was waitint: to take them to Wash ington. Ambassador Morrow went to his home in Hugh-wood. N. J. ' America than Paris is typical of provincial Knmce, Here there are only five cities with more than a million population. In spite of thc drift to iub;.'.n(eis the great majority of people 'in the United Stales still live in rural iand small city areas. In towns like La Grande and Union and Walla Walla and Jloise can be found the more average standards of American life. And they do not coincide with those pictured by Mile. Chaptal. Although some parents drink in every community, they are not inveterate drinkers. 'Although half of the people may be lax in religious observ , ance, only a very small percentage are utterly lacking in religious beliefs. .And contrary to her impression, the average American home outside the large cities is very much what the name implies a home with moral stand ards we would be very willing to have compared to tho.se of France. There is' no objection, of course, to Mile. ChapUI's opinion, except that its general acceptance by her fellow citizens abroad constitutes just one more barrier to complete inter national friendship and got id will. Only by a true knowledge of other peoples and how they live can the principles of understanding and peace be promoted. That can well be kojitin mind by investigators when they visit strange hauls. Ill I D UII IIOI I ll.II Ui- Ain.-r i. .in ! -li-gui ion had b-en ; "very busy f-nt-rtaiuiug juni being iit-riaint r." I "The KllgliHh people W-re (e. im-Miui arid i-tuerMim moHtfthurge ot first graciously." she said. "Then- was i-rmret f in with little tilie- left for HIKhl-neeiHi;. After tloy had landed the dele, giites entered atiiomobih-n und NKW Y);k. Api :: (,l' Matthew M.-tv.u Jr.. yon ut the rn.levtant Wpieopal bisfi-jp of '1 eniM .-s. e. u a.: held without bail fnr the grand juiy todav on a d-gree inunler in the fieath of ItnKX'riH, Serving six 1 Vj pounds broccoli. 1 teaspoon salt. i cups water. Souk broccoli in salt and' water. J 5 minutes. Carefully look over j and wash vegetable, discarding withered leaves. 'Cut off stems, peel nnd dice. Mix broccoli and stems and boil gently 20 minutes in boiling sailed water. Drain und serve. .MK-k ll(ilhiinlnls4 Satif-r . (Huilitble for any boiled vegeUible) 4 tablespoons butter VATICAN CITY, Apr. 29 AP) Jhn J. ' l:askob. Anw-riean fin ancier, and his family were re ceived in audience by Tope l'ius today. They were presented by MoiiMj-nor Spellman of the Huston diocese. . - The pontiff was pleased to learn that Mr. Itaskob had attended the consecration of Mjmsignur I'liz-zardo,-Jtssistant -tpal secretary nf stale in Si. i'etcr's la-st Sunday, and Imparted the apostilic bene- t diction to the group. ASK VOII HAIL ItlDS I'OHTbANI), Apr. '2'J (AC) W. I. Turner, president of the Ore-, Run Hlectric railroad, said today bids will be called at once for work 1 on the twit seel ions of road the- j line plans to build Inlo the Hastern ' Linn county tinvbur belt. Author- ity for the line to extend has been 1 given by the Interstate commerce j cimtnissiin. . ' lavid Ciiyitti iy beaten n rooming hoti.s an J, ho was fatal upper WeK side April IS. ffjo STEViEKSVAN ENGELEN CO .ili-INCH SHANTUNG Till), blue, Kiwn, orange, )i-!!o, white. 49c i -7 i ki. m corn-: I lit i r u .'mk-i- limly fnilslii.l In liin Dm-... I.Mihir milioi-"l-rlns In .'MM.llint '.,ritlil.n nnil ' K M"t"i- lh.it In fully k'tMriinliM-il l.y our (K TIimI rounlH Pulley, i'oiik. In iimiI iltlvi- Ihlii i-ur. $425 m-i. t in;viMi.irr t ticn lleie i.i it real lialKaiu. mine in and eoirtpate this ear ?tt lis un eiialed lew prlre. I food tire-, fim ImmIv, good uphot.itery aiitl a coutlrto tnotur ovrrhnnt. 't'hf'tiitHls of utiles nf bm" tost. Ir.in-poi-latiell $245 M1!7 I Ul .:, I.K.H i' IU I.I i:iiY J'ody In e.xetdlent ihape, euelofed cab and door irio rear of truck, l'inished in a durk gi-een paint, flood tires, r-emrtlefe iit.ttt.r overhaul and an I K Thai " ni-Mi t ni: ituLirr imit:iii l M l r..m- in and let iik '"'l an ideal u?ed ear. ' lllile!.. i.Vei-Hi.e lieivy Ine.i. sh'-ck ab.-oi -fiers, is fiont and rear. C1n tn Mat k Iiico piped in Mohair iiphoNtrring like This t-ar has never been md is better i niiv i; duty bmup i-he.l green. new. abided than ii $675 Larison Chevrolet Company Used Car CriFW phone Lot JHa? Main 508 "LTE'S only a kid perhaps, but he's at a very impression able age . . . when the treat ment he gets-as your news paper carrier can fashion his whole future viewpoint. His sole ambition now is to get your newspaper to you on time he'll sacrifice no end of comfort to make good. Why not reward him with prompt payment of your monthly bill? It will inspire him to a still greater service. Have the money ready at his regular collection and watch his smile of satisfaction. Make a "regular American man" out of a regular impres sionable youngster. EVENING OBSERVER Circulation Department - A GRANDE j -STORE i Successors to N.K.WEST & CO. MEN S STORE J (0 mUORSHEIM SHOE IR0LIC WITH ANSON WEEKS DANCE ORCHESTRA 9 P. M. COAST TIME OVER N.B.C. TUESDAY APR. 29TH Many Bargains Listed on Want Ad Page Fire Insurance a Key to Low Prices Few have a true appreciation ot the far reaching effect of Stock. Fire Insurance in holding down the cost of all merchandise. IVo jess authority than 'the Encyclopedia Britannica' contributes a "testimonial" as 1 follows: ' : ... ' '"; '. "In thc JJnitcd-, States, as in no i, , .... .,9.er. .couptry, Jias insurance in j . . all its various phases become ' . ; universally recognized as an essential of commerce and in dustry. To this fact may be . attributed in large measure the ' achievements of America in business enterprises. ' "Insurance encourages men and corporation to hazard their re-" sources on new developments without fear of loss from natural ' and unavoidable catastrophes." V At every turn in the processing of materials storage, manufacturing, transportation, wholesaling,' retailing thc protection cf , Stock Fire Insurance contributes that indis pensable element of certainty "without load ing prices; for Speculative risk. . By paying a premium which on the. average is only a fraction of of the " amount insured, business transfers to the Stock Fire Insurance companies what would otherwise be an oppressive carrying charge against the risk of destruction by fire. Thc 239 Stock Fire Insurance companies constituting the National Board of Fire Underwriters have rendered their services at an average price that has constantly de clined for more than twenty years. THE NATION' ii i . . FIRE UNDkRWR'lTSSs0' 85 John Street,. New York STOCK FTRf: INSI mNcE COMPAMES j i 407 Fir St. MariyBargains Listed on Want Ad Fage