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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1930)
Saturday, July 19, 1930 LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER,1 LA GRANDE, ORE. Page Five' a -ii Liffhting Rates L QJLlL ilUriTJJ i Reduced Friday , - J At till- Hotel" Among t!Aose registered nt local hotels nre: Paul Patterson and wire, Pcrryvlllc. Md.; Betty Roesch. Port lund' J- P- Wood, and family. Poca lello' A. C. Gcrtsen and family. Omaha: J' A- slllcl:llr nnd family. Twin Falls: Edith Keegan, Eugene: P. j swanson. Seattle; Mary L. MeKln. lev Great Palls, Monta.ia; Fred J. Eradv. Portland; E. C. Stark and family. Colorado Springs; Mrs. P. A. Wenver. Salt Lake City; Miss Mono lian. Boise; and Katherlno C. Cuddy, Boise. Joseph, who Is charged with obtain ing money under false pretenses. Ill WulliMvn O. C. Fleshman spent one day this week In Wallowa. Lett B. C. Mlms. of Portland, left this morning, for his homeafter visiting the past two days with his sister. Mrs. Ed. C. Shellworth. Airplane Trip Val Jensen, owner of The Little Bhop, left Thursday evening on a trip to New York City. He will fly . .... wiv .lersev to l. uuvKv ,unU. ... -., 0y piQQQ irom bpoitane to at. ram. stopped In La Grande and the A. A. Minn., and travel from there to New a nffiee to secure Information about YOrk bv train. The return will be the roads while on his way to visit marte the same way and he expects t M. MlcKie, siave iuuu miu uniij inspector at Klllsboro. Mr. Davis and his wife had an Interesting trip west, seeing the summit of Pike's peak, visiting the Teton mountains and touring Yellowstone park. They expect to stop In La Orande on their return homo. ' to be gone for several weeks. Stopping Over Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Alford and chlld- To Hot Lake William Arrlvey has returned to Hot Lake where he will be a patient for observation and treatment for injuries received in a recent airplane crash here. Left Last Nlclit Miss Marlorle Reynolds ana ner KKVVrOK STAPLES lNJl'BEIl I 1IKAT TBACKllIKS P.n; , -,.,. nnnn.r ...r. m SA.,atnr PITTKH1 mmt. .iiiiv 19 t&t Ten "Yes." responded Curtis Isaac E. Staples of Portland. Is con- ! poisons were dead In western Penn- Johnson tlicii yielded to P" fine to his home with a broken leg syjvanla and West Virginia today as. consideration of the first of the more ByP.S.C.Action SALEM, Ore., July 10 W) Over an area extending from the north city limits of Portland to and including Salem a reduction In residential and commercial electric lighting rates of tho Pacific Uorthwest Public Bers'ice company Is made in an order of the , territory In the Portland area Is af fected except that In Multnomah county west of the Willamette river and north of Portland' north city limits. Vancouver. Wash., is in the Port area, but the Oregon commission is without Jurisdiction outside of Ore gon. The aggregate reduction will be about (340.000 a year. The order be comes effective August 15. suffered Thursday In an automobile accident on the Grand Ronde high way. He lost control of tho car and It crashed from a small bridge Into a creek bed and overturned. MOST OF U. S. SIZZLES IN SEVERE HEAT Girls Smuggled (Continued from rage One) than 20 articles of the treaty. He insisted, however, that the article bo read. llelleve Vote Near It was the first time In two weeks of debate that the Benate has even anoroached consideration of the thermometers generally climbed to reccrd levels. A baby died in Its mother's arms In Sharon, Pa., where the tempera turo was 08 degrees, a farmer col lapsed in his fields near there, and ,i 55 venr nlri mini (tlpri nf IniurlPR iiffpreri in n fnii rmm n. noreh roof treaty text. Leaders confidently be where he had made his bed. . lleved it signalled tho approach of Iu Charleston. W. Va.. where a ! the end of a losing fignt Dy me spir reading of 103 degrees yesterday was ! Ued but small band of opponents. thi iiitrh mnrk of tiiis rninii. a hnhv Before actual reading of the ar died of a nurtured skull after falllne ' tides of the treaty began. Benatov from a window near which It had Johnson oifcrcd two more reserva bcen placed for air. Another baby I tlons bringing the total to more than tiled In Pittsburgh as thermometers crawled abovo the record of 03 do grees of yesterday. . Kitiiir nu: in cAi.uoHxi.v LOS ANGELES. Cal., July 19 m i Southern California's record breaking ren. Baroara oeau ami junior, ui brother, Joe akeet Keynoias, leit Spokane. Wash., and Mr. Alford's Friday night driving to Southern Cal mother, Mrs. Bertha White, of fills uorhla. At Stanford university Miss city, arrived here lust nignt. alter Reynolds will visit a sorority sister, traveling mrouK" Uiuiiuriim aim pai to i of Mexico. They were the overnight ' Mar operation guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vern Berry rs c A Androws underwent a and also visited here with Mr. and maJor operation Thursday at tho Mrs. Glenn Baling. Mrs. Bertha White GraJnde jfonae hospital. ' j Will UCLUlljJKIiJf l.iw fiuuiu a uuuu ( their return to their home in Spo- j Ia kanc. entire number reported maximums under 80. Tho nation's granaries, baked by tho persistent sun, faced drought. Livestock in many places muv reei:. pastures turn russet and die. Tho danger of corn being llred in the Held was felt In Iowa. A few deaths ; occurred Sun six day heat wave had dissipated to strokes, prostrations and drownings; day but not before the eighth death but the number was not large con- had been reported, sideling the extent of the heat wave. ! Matilda Lagrant,7G, died yesterday Beaches, especially those nenr large in an auto camp at HoltviUe, in tho t Ttr iclties. swarmed witn people, in imperial vauey. &no was siricKen ifllO lClVy 111 too icago. where an estimated quarter of Thursday. Her death raised to seven million took to the water to shaUo the number of fatalities occurring in BALTIMORE, July 19 (JP) Charges of f the heat. Lake Michigan had ft tho below-sea-levcl valley flnnklng against the two midshipmen escorts temperature of 08 degrees. tho lower end of the Colorado rivor. oi a pair of Washington society girls. phllllpsburg. Kan., lad 113 degrees, breezes off the Pacific ocenn urhn wpr .uiMi into tho naval oh rmnnn ino brought relief from tho high tempera- academv mess Sundav nieht in the i WMt.hfr nmnhots wpm douctful tures. All sections outside of Im- 1 garb of middles, have been referred concerning immediate relief for most pe rial Valley reported below SO de a dozen. Ono would declare" tho treaty began. Senator Johnson offer-! escape clause."- ' ed two more reservations bringlprJ Senator Walsh, democrat. Massa the total to moro than a dozen. Out ! chusetts, offered an amendment ta would declare the treaty null ana t the treaty at the outset or the day void if the United States entered thz to have the United States completa league of nations, world court, or , practically all craft allowed It under any other organization .affiliated with j the pact by December 31, 1936. Walsh tho league, he second Is designed to j said, however, he was not a treaty protect America's rights under the ; opponent. to the navv department following preliminary investigation by Capt. C. 1. Snyder, commandant of midship men. Lieutenant Commander Donald Beary, aide to Rear Admiraal S. S. Robinson, superintendent of tho academy, said nearly a score of oth er middles who were at tho same grcn weather, Los Angeles cooling off with the mercury at 84. In the Im- tral and northwest, but forecasters Perlal district the thermometers still pretended to see no certain surccuso were uuove iuu negiuea uu iowur to the heat humidity was reported. At El Centro ,' ... , 106 degrees was registered. The need of rahi was felt in a j promising cooler weather for tho score of states. The United States n . LovnPni tho wnntbor hnrcmu said ,,. ,,, .,'... M ntf .iVya of the country. Possibility of thun dershowers was betpoken in the cen weather bureau at Washington cr middles wno were at mo same tn d nartlcularlv severe mw" " i"l-Ml"1 " v.. table with the girls were restricted ..S. Alabama . ???.. L" p"" "..r ? l . i .,.t t...... .... 1-!--, i,.,.,.,., ifpni-i tin. tjimipriitiirefl rlown. ortlaild I I"..""-.? ..." 7" ; .Louisiana and Arkansas, ana 10 a nri ,,, ,, ,, i,entwnvna Mrs. Ray A. Cook Is expected to re- , u""-'i""" slightly less degree In the middle and ... k . .,,.. .. rectu,a turn from Portland tomorrow morn- m-iu ihi.e iiiul'sTF.l) southwest. Monday at Calexico on the Mexican Ing. She has been visiting her son, r,!. Hale is under 2500 bonds ' Such heat as the nation cxperleuc- border. Outside of the Imperial Val- ltflnnied Yesterday . August J. Stange returned home Raymond, at the C. M. T. C. camps t fr i,mrlnIr Mnndav nf- ed yesterday and faced again today ioy, a top mark of 109 degrees was ,2pJterday. after spending several 0Ver the weekend. t(,rnn nt 2 o'clock in tho Justice lias proved a serious tax upon BOt Tuesday at Ontario, 40 miles cast Would Father BOTHER with, the washing? k S wceKs wun ms iamuy unu uib wm. of th peace court 0i a charge of pumping stations. Aireaay m par 0f Los Angeles, in Los Angeles tho Y1' Siegrisfs, visiting in Honolulu. Tho illness unlawfxu nossession of intoxicating of Muryland warning has been given highest temperature. 08 degrees, was balance or ine stange lamny are now Mrs. Frame Hanson wno is spena- 11f11in wftL tUfn fnrtY,r rmwirtions lliat unless there is nun soon, mere reached Monday, visiting Mr. Stange's sister. Mrs. P. W. ing the summer In Tacoma is reported . prclimmary hearlne was held this mu8t be R 60 Pcr ceut curtailment oi The first sunstroke doath in Los morning In the same office It is wuwr Bunsumpiiou. - Angeics county in moro man two ue- erported that he was arrested near Tne coolest section of the nation cades occurred Thursday at Monte Elgin and that a buried Btill. one yesterday was in Michigan's upper pello, Los Angeles suburb. of the largest ever found in this peninsula wnere Marquette naa an county, was discovered on his place, King, in Los Angeles, Cal., where they to bo 111. She may not return home will remain lor aoout a weeK. iwy untu acptemper. will then return to La Grande by car. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Slegrlst and Visited Here T daughter, aro now motoring through Tho Rev. George Pollard, of Port- cnlifornie. and will return to La land, was a house eucst at the Wil- Grando by way of Yellowstone na- liam Shade home Wednesday evening tlonal park. i MAIN 56 STANDARD LAUNDRY CO. DAYTON TIRES EXTRA SPECIAL 30x3i Heavy Duty Tubes 98c 29x4.40 Heavy Duty Tubes-:: $U0 You will have to see these to appreciate the value at these prices 4-phj 30x3V, $6.01 29x4.40 6.85 29x4.50 7.36 30x4.50 7.65 : 29x4.75 8.88 i Heavy Duty Truck Tires 32x6 8-ply ....$29.93 32x6 10-ply 41.31 34x7 12-ply 61.13 36x8.25 8-ply 49.77 3Sx9.75 10-ply 81.49 ELECTRIC CO. 213 Greenwood Phone M 520 Vlslllng Here Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Miller and son. of Castle Rock, Wash., are in tho city vlBltlng at' the home of Mrs. Dcsslo Higglns. At one time Mr. Pollard was the Bap tist minister for La Grande. enviable maximum of 62. The Pa ' Sheriff' Jess Dreshears led tho raid! cjflc coast, too, had temperatures in FIGHT HALTS with Officer Johnson and two fed- fcI1 ci"i-wuie suvyimw, wn ou From Portland Mrs. Avon Dean, of Portland, is vlsltlne In La Grando at the home They, with Mrs. Hig- of Mr. and Mrs. William Casey, who gins and other guests from California wero recently visiting In Portland and spent last Sunday in the mountains, at the beach with his parents, Mr. viewing old nomesteaas ana many ana Airs. w. . asey, aim wiu uhl-c other sights. The Miller's will spend came to La Grande where Mrs. Dean ..loltl-.in nl.l fplantle ni-mmH 11-111 Tjtclt fni- chflllt twn Vflf U Mrft. Palmer Junction and Elgin, then will Dean was a resident of La Grande a ! return to La Grande for a longer visit number of years ago and has been a j- cral men with him. HOMKS KOHlJi:i AT I'NION Several homes were robbed at Union last night, according to word received here today. Ed Spears' home was robbed of some money and watches, the Holmes homo reported loss of some money, and two or three other places were entered, but details had not been learned in La Grande. i at San Francisco Yesterday's heat casualties included ! tho death of a man In Springfield, illl., from sun stroke.1 the death of a Chicago fireman who collapsed ai .! drill, and a drowning and two pros- , tratlons in New York City, where n leaders rushed TO. HEAR NAVY TREATY TEXT (Continued from Pago Ono) before returning to their home. From Suit Lake City Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Llnchoetcn, of Salt Lake City, wero In La Grande Thursday on business. From Elgin Mrs. Elma Sewell. of Elgin, was in La Grande Thursday transacting busi ness. Another business visitor from Elgin Thursday was Mrs. George Gordon, From Mot Lake : - . , Among visitors . In La Orandc Thurstlay from Hot Lake were: Mlsa O'Rourke. Miss Mildred Pummley anci Dr. Bishop. frequent visitor here since leaving. Sho is a sister of Mrs. Hal Bohnen- pltal which Is a 1500-bed Institution showers. kamp, Mrs. William Casey, Miss Cor- just recently constructed. While ir. , Last night was the hottest of tho rlno Bakor and Mrs. Louis Jensen, of school here sho was a four year hon- year In the city. Walclport, who is attending the East- or student and active In school, Tho temperature climbed to 74 de em Oregon Normal school this sum- events. j grees at 6:30 o'clock this morning lner. taking special courses in art, a degree higher than on a night In and music. i Leaving Todya tJune which had held the record for Mr. and Mrs. unaries Hoenm are the summer. Thick humidity nccom leaving today for Seattle and Tacoma panted the heat, making even the fire to attend thft Northwest furniture escapes uncomfortable places to sleep. ur. James Kimunit, wentner nureau to the floor. Vico temperature of 84 was accompantea president Curtis ruled that after tho by high humidity. treaty had been considered article by article the resolution of ratification SEAHINC WEEKEND DI E couid not bo taken up until the fol- NEW YORK. July 19 Xi A selu- lowing day. ing weekend Is forecast for New York "That will be' Monday?" Inquired City and state, with relief coming Johnson who had sat down for a probably late tomorrow in coonng moment of rest. 'Yes. Add it will be open to debate?" asked Senator Moses, republican, New Hampshire, another of tho op- Kegnlar Meeting The weekly meeting of the Odd Pel lows lodge was held last night with, market. , They will also visit their tho usual business trasactcd. ison, Eugene. Roohm. " .. I wnnlrl hp wonprnllv hlirher todav with The Prtrkdnle dub . . V H Arrived Lnst Night r 'i I inland cities feeling still greater 'heat. The Parkdale club will meet Wed- ,' Mrs. R. .N, Heasty, or . Wellington i The temnerature in New York at ncsday .at the Riverside park at 2 Kan., arrived in La Grando last even- mldforcnoon was 81 and it was In o'clock. A potluok luncheon- will be ing to visit her sons J. P. and H. N. creasing steadily. Yesterday's high ocivuu ut, v" wuou ui. uie ihoiuwuu. tieasty, oi ija- uranae, nnu k. . Ji.. was 86 CHEAP LETTER HEADS I XuTrr Ikicl nml Ni-virr Will I I Do "Anybody Any (Jiiod. 'J'licy 1 I nrt' Just lillio Itlrty CollnrH. I meteorologist,- said- Icmpei-atufea i'asU froV Sampii'S o.t ItelU'r GO EE SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY I'jtiv Ilomls ,; . ...NELSON Opposite I'ost Office Fishing Trlp-i- Mr. and Mrs. Heasty, of Enterprise. ChasQ Bohuenkamo iiinnmt : ' Tuesday night for their home li j and daughter, Nancy, are enjoying a - Mrs. J. Miller Is reported to be 111 fishing trip on the Greenhorn. at her home. At the Hotels. Among those registered at local ho- To Hood River- Bob Ward Is expected to return to ilet iirnert Home Mrs. S.i E. Buck nml- ciiuaren icil Pocatello. They have been visit tn, at the home of Mr. and Airs. w. m. Kcnncda.' Mrs. Buck's sister. From Elgin v Mrs. N. R. Parks, of Elgin, spent Thursday visiting her daughter, Mrs. Verno Payne. Severed Forefinger Hnrrv Cork, at the Johnson camp near Kamela, severed the end or ni son, Esther Gorenson. Tacoma; mi. nere Thursday left forefinger recently when it was nnd Mrs. J. Burgeiand. Portland; E. , a. L. Puller, of Portland, spent caught under the wheel of a tractor.. Mutler, Portland; Marjorie Buch- Thursday transacting business in thii I lltiuil, t-ornuiiu, jum;vtcv(i vuuivi .City. I cago; Bruce Douglass, New York City; Mr. and Mrs. E. P. McPadden, Spok-' i?rmn senltle ane; W. J. Davidson, Portland, Will-) Charles Shatia, of beattle. was a lam C. Piper. Spokane; Mr. and Mrs. pUsiness visitor here Friday. D. E. t H. Gober, Chicago; O. A. Megorden, rjiKrnan, of Boise, was also hero on tels are: Art Adamson. Portland; Bill dny from Hood River where ho went Green, Portland; O. E. Harris, Port- Friday on a business .trip. , land; J. N. Yatman, St. Louis; H. E. I '. v:, Haggard, Seattle; W. ' P.-r Strauss, jo Union . r ''. Portland; J. J. Handsaker. Portland; ; Ray Williams mado a business trip R. V. Kester, Piedmont, Cal.; C. W. to Union Friday. Hudson, I'ortianci; miss weiue jjar ? MPMR60BaaHaWiWI--aMJnrMMiiiiiTW'.n-..i q BLUE ; MT.; ICE.' CREAM: The Best in Eiuslern OrcRon, 3i)c a Quart, all day Tomorrow, Sunday. 2 Ice Croani Cones for 5c They're Twins at . - .1 BERGER'S CASH Illness Kenneth Gekeler is ill at home of undulant fever. 1., i:..lnl.irlci MIskos Joan ana Marion x-iuut-ft. tjoiso; w. . luiuuu, oiw-aum;. ore visiting this week In Enterprise. . In Enterirlse Visiting I Stanley Cathcart spent Friday In Miss Nora Konueau, leacner 01 jantcrprise on ousinuss. Coeur d FRESH "MEAT DAILY business the same day. Rondeau, Alene. Idaho, is visiting former classmate. Genevieve Gmeiner, student at the Eastern Oregon Nor mal school. Tonsils It en 10 vert The young son of M. Baker, of Haines, underwent an operation for the removal of his tonsils Thursday. ADMITS SLAYlMi Elected Class Official ! Miss Edwardlno Malone. president of the Associated Girl Students for La Grande High school In 1028, has 1 To Enterprise . V. S. Ivanhoe and J. D. Zurcher. nttornovs. left this mornlntt for En- Aneeles county hospital whore she Is fesscd to the sin vine of his aunt. terprise to spend a few days. While a second year student, ranking high Mrs. K. Edith Wight, a veteran store there, they will attend circuit court in scholarship. She was chosen from detective, in her Saugus. Mass., home, for the case of Norval Rooney, of a class of 468 students of the hos- last Tuesday. NEW HAVEN, Conn., July 19 fP) been elected student body treasurer Bernard Thomoson. 26, surrendered and class representative of the Los to the police early today and con- .1 S OLD MAN MORTON 'S SON, ELMER By Oscar Hitt 1 BEE NHI7-! MR. RUTH,) K1&HT 1 Sen Sim J( ,f THEY'D CAlND BE A. PITCHER f ST, rJ i SPVHACH, L 1 OM A CUU -THAT ftgg vg I 701 SURE ARE OHE SEROUS.HES &aa f V L0OKS, HtS V, REGULAR. feUV ! ) 3mTo- THE " 1 DUMBEJ T. SQUIRRELS ) Hr&Y WWP ELMER MEETS Packed With Real A .. Entertainment )" ' I BRIGHTEST WlifA Slf ' n C , t ' f ' f IK ?s ?' Miii t murium rnii . . . rn i.t i... i i mk tejm - V V5L ! P AclfVn and Select Vitaphonc Acts W n ' tWiV-rk LAST TIME TODAY . 111 &ti' A 'jf "ALL QUIET ON TUB Uq Wslsb! 1 WKSTKKN FRONT" 1 GRANADA j Last Time Today mmf, fefeA "ROUGH WATERS" H ij.LAM,. DO PEOPLE. READ SMALL ADS? "YES" says, BREIER "If the ads really say Yesterday a small ad was run in papers all over the west telling of our new vat dyed print at 15c. Almost at once phone and wire orders poured in from many Breier Stores for more print. - .It was so good. Monday we have more new Super Bargains including A stamped five-piece luncheon set. napkins and cloth 18"x IS" for Read These Ads It Pays You Come Every Day to DEPT. STORKS (ft ' , 4fi m mkiwwmM fs&'m THE WEST