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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1933)
Page Two LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE, ORE. Thursday, September 7, 1933 i ( t - H H 't' (t If ' : II it . (Incorporated) Aa buMpudml Newipapar moo Mala 600 H. W. FBEDBUOBa . i Publlaber and General Manager HAROLD M. FTKLAT . , Bualneaa Manager - Fubuaned evening!, exception Sunday, at 1710 Sixth atreet, I Qranda, Oregon. ' altered at the foateKlce of La Grande, Oregon, aa Second Olaaa Mali Matter under act of March 3, 1878. - r- OFFICIAL PAPER OF UNION COUNTY AND TBJI OTIT OF LA OHANDB - .... MBMBBR OF ASSOCIATED PBB88 " . The Associated Preaa U exclusively entitled to use for publication of all newa dlspatchea credited to It or not otherwise credited If pub Uahed ben, All rlgbta of republication of ipeclal dlapatohea In tola paper and alao tbe local newa herein alao are reserved. .. - ... ... National Advertlalng Bepreaentatlfe ' U. O. MOOENSEN CO.. Ino. Ban Frandaco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, Chicago Detroit, New York - - . ... . SUBSCRIPTION RATS8 By Carrier Dally, on month In advance- Dally, all months tn advance. pally, aingia copy Bo Dally, per month In advance- By Mall Dally, per tlx months In advance- Pally, par year In advance -ea.SO -15.00 The Weather J I Judge, Scene of Lamson Trial WHAT II Kit FOHKt'AST OrcKon; Cloudy un the vwnt, other wise fair tonight and I'litjuy; wal trmtti In Hum tern Orcein tonight; rifting twiiperature Friday; gentlo changeable wlndH uTMiore, I.OCAf, WKATMFR Wrlneday: ..niiixlnium liH, mlnl nuint 4K uliove. I'urtly oloudy. Today: Inlinum 47, 7 a. m, 153 i nhova Partly cloudy. , I rj I Li EAST OREGON RIFLE SHOOT NEXT SUNDAY Is- isi (Continued From Page One) officer for the shoot. First Lieut. Jesse V. Andrews Is statistical officer, and Second Lieut. Robert R. Carey Is mess and supply officer for tbe day. La Grande's team consists of Sgt. George D. Oliver, Sgt. Max W. Burke, Corp. Ralph R. Badger, Corp. Howard Peterson, Corp. George Plank and Pri vate 1st Class Carl G. Johanson. and as alternates, Sgt. Edwin J. Brlggs and Corp. Walter F. Chadwlck. In addition to the annual trophy awarded the winning team, J. H. Pcare & Son put up a beautiful trophy which remains in the pos session of the winning team as long as it holds the camplonshlp. La Grande will be shooting to retain possession of this trophy as well as win the 1833 tltli. BOXJNG REVIVING HERE Ltt 3rnpde and valley people who enjoy the ancient art of fist fighting it's boxing nowadays, of course had an in teresting evening here Labor day when a first class card was staged under the auspices of the American Legion by Leo McCarthy and Martin Fitzgerald. Of course, many people do not care for boxing, but for those who derive entertainment from this branch of sport, the Labor day fight was a tfignal hat boxing is in for. a re '.vlynwally. Jt has been many years since such an interest ing, clean and entertaining boxing card was staged here, n'd' those Who admire fighters regard it as a positive indica tion that more of its kind will be enjoyed during the full mid winter months. '" One thing la evident. There are a large numlber of people here who would patronize such a sporting event if they can bfl assured that. the bouts are honest and the pugilists well matched. Promoters McCarthy and Fitzgerald took a long step toward rebuilding fan confidence in boxing here with their latest endeavor, and they are to be congratulated.' I ; IHUi.l.'l- . Football interest was quickened here this week with the return 'fa' La Grande of Coach Bob Quinn, of the Normal school, and Coach Ira Woodie, of the La Grande High school. It set the fans' to thinking that it won't be Idng now until flye thud of toe agains't blgskin is heard. And, best of all, both coaches are hopeful of having a winning team' on the ' lftlq this year, assuring La Grande of some unquestionably good games. ' ' ' " MMES. HUNTER AND HOOD ENTERTAIN 2 i M 1 Library Ghats Yir Santa Clara county courthouse, San Jose, Calif., where David Lamson, executive of the Stanford University Press, goes on trial on charge of beating ills young wife, Allene Lamson, to death In their Stanford campus home Memorial k 'W,,5v! Da'- Il1sct 13 Superior Judga 4 a SAia Robert H. Am trial iiutnt WALLOWA (Special) Mrs. C. A. Hunter and Mrs. Ross Hoc-d enter uincd 0 Final' group of frlmlf at a one o'clock bridge luncheon at the home of the former Wednesday af ternoon. Lovely yellow double nasturtiums and yellow tapers formsd the center piece for the tablo at which the ten members of ths party were seated. FcHowlng tho luncheon hour, two tables were arranged for bridge. Mrs. Margaret McDonald, of Los Angeles, Cel., received the prize for high score. Guests for tho informal afternoon were: Mesdomcs Lawrence Frlzzell. F, W. Furst. J. E. Gregory. Margaret Mc Donald. Chas. Haupricbs, Edwin Mar vin, George E. Dale and C. A. Mc-Cloran. TODAY IN BRIEF, IN AND AROUND AS CHKOXICLED BY THE DAILY LEASED WIUB OF THE ASSOCIATED PKESS Brichoux Jailed In Baker Murder Case (Continued from Page One) XO TRACK OF MISSING StF-X PORTLAND, Sept. 7 (A1) No trace pi three men missing on the snow covered, storm-lashed Blopcs of Mount Jefferson since Monday had been found by searchers, they reported thin morning after an unceasing search for 24 hours over the area In which the trio are believed lost. Tho three missing are John Thom rc, Davis McCamant and Don Burk hardt, all of Portland. The search ing party, organized in Portland Tues day night, planned to set out Im mediately in a renewed effort to find the lost men. in tho camp, all except 24 have sig nified their Intention of reenlistlng fo; the ensuing six months. ' FATALLY INJ(, Iti;i) SALEM, Sept 7 VP) A falling snag fatally Injured Dale Monroe, 21, of Mchama, at a logging camp near Mill City lato yesterday. He died soon afterward at a hospital In Mill City. SHOOTING AT HKFPNEH PENDLETON. Ore., Sept. 7 P) Licyd Matteson of John Day was J in a hospital at Heppner today with ( Hy Mubel E. Doty, Librarian Tho following Interesting edltcrlal, "Squaring the Circle" -was printed In the Saturday Review of Litera ture fee July 29, 1933: "If the new economic dispensation has its wuy we shall have more hours of leisure In the future. How to make that leisure Interesting without constant reliance upon external stim ulus will be one of the problems of the morrow. Men will be forced again to rely upon their own resources for mental and spiritual satisfaction, up on friendship, and books, and home Aversions. "All tho agencies of the home and the community that make for a r.chcr and fuller life will need the most careful nursing, the most en lightened direction. For It Is no use to bestow the boon of leisure upon society unless at the sama time the means to Its sane and constructive enjoyment is to be available. If lei sure la to Imply idleness and vacuity, then nothing will be gained from it. But If It Is to mean opportunity for physical and mental improvement, there Is no telling to -what lengths It may bring our society in ' the course of time. It has frequently been said that the splendid aclileve ments of classical days rested upon the fact that a slave class released time for Intellectual pursuits to those more fontunately placed. Now we are within sight of a period wheii every individual should have leisure for tho exercise of the mind. Who can tfll what flowering of national literature, and art, and beauty In general the added hours of freedom may pro ducer The resources of the La Grande public library are for those who wish to use them for study and recreation, Students who are unable to continue their education arc urged to do some systematic reading. A reading course on any subject In which the student may be interested will be compiled by the librarian. If sufficient ma terial on the subject is lacking in the local library the books may fce borrowed from the state library. Clark Wood ' Says ' Official recognition would no doubt be promptly extended to Rus sia if, unofficially, 'we did not know her so well Speaking of the state of the na tion, with so much that's new ana different going on it's a sort of fas cination. The report that Pope Pius has a model farm will not resolve the doubt In this bailiwick that there ever could be one. Shear distress will be avoided If the Iambs will enly keep out of the Wall street pens. Latin Americans get a lot of sport out of a presidential race, oven when the president beats them to the border. 1 The automotive column of " the NRA advance has. It seems, encount ered a difficult Ford. We deduce from his story tlutt the press writer who stripped in order to foregather with a nudist colony wos. at all events, covered with confusion. print was found. Police said Brichoux is a brother of the lato Augustine Brichoux, first wire of Dr. Albert Kochler, widower of tho slain woman. C. f 2. MEN KEENTIKT ROSEBURG, Ore., Sept. 7 (P) The Wolf Creek C. C.C. camp, located on l Little river, 35 miles east of Rose- burg, which won the highest honors I among C. C. C. camps of the 0th corps '.area, will remain practically intact . throughout the winter. It was an ncunced hero today. Of the 228 men four bullet wounds in hie body which police said he suffered In a shoot ing in a Heppner card, room. Bill Pen land of Heppner, who the officers said fired at Matteson with nr. automatic pistol, was held In Jail. Matteson's condition was reported by hospital attendants to be grave. The officers said they were told ill feel- Ing hnd existed between the two. 1 TWO VIOLENT DEATHS WALDPORT. Ore., Sept. 7 (P) War ren Burtis, 40, once employed in the Oregon state highway engineer's of fice, apparently shot and killed his sister-in-law. Opal Gillespie, 35, Wold port High school teacher here last nl.gh, then turned the weapon upon himself. Inflicting wounds that proved fatal, state police said following an investigation. Mrs. Burtis and two grown children were absent at the timo of the tragedy. The "least sacrificing" of all big leaguers this season seem to be Luke Appling, Jim Foxx, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and Pepper Martin, none of whom, up to mid-August, was credit ed bunt. The dead body of a wild elephant has, we're told, never been found. Nobody, perhaps, has ever looked up Salt river. 6 vnais it mi Parents WHEN !OCTOK!$ lUSAGIlKE When two doctors disagree, they may both be right. This may sound contradictory, but it is true more often than most people appreciate. A patient, for example, may be sick and one doctor may make a diagnosis of high blood pressure with kidney involvement, while an other physician consulted in the same case may make a diagnosis of kidney disease with arterial involve ment. In such a hypothetical exam ple both physicians make the same diagnosis, but reverse the order of emphasis. Of course, not all, not even the vast majority of disagreements in diagnosis or treatment can be recon ciled eo readily. At times they cUffer as much as black and white. But such extreme disagreements are much more rare than the average man in the street believes. Though human anatomy and hu man physiology conform to a cer tain pattern common to all mortals, individuals do vary in their reac tions so widely that few medical procedures can be . effectively aim uniformly applied to all of them. An architect may design a houso to be built in a section thousands of miles distant. An engineer without ever having set an eye on the struc ture, can solve a mechanical prob lem Involved in building a bridge. Not so with the doctor. He may have treated a thousand cases of typhoid or a thousand cases of diph theria, and yet' tho next case may differ so radically from all the pre ceding ones that he must perforce follow a new line of treatment. It is for this reason that to diag nose, treat and advise effectively, it is imperatively necessary that the physician shall have had an oppor tunity to examine the patient per sonally. Into the diagnosis, treat ment or advice which the physician gives enter not only the patient's conditions and circumstances but also those of the physician. These factors are so numerous that it is not c"iifflcult to understand why two physicians examining the name patient may arrive at diver gent conclusions. Search For More Dead, Injured in Rio Grande ( Continued From Page On) stricken area linked by paved high ways, accounted for ' 24 deaths' and hundreds of persons injured. There were found to be 3760 families desti tute, 4000 homes destroyed and 8000 damaged. The dead: Bill Duncan, Harlingcn. Two unidentified Americans at Har lingcn. Mra. John Kuacera, 30, Rio Hondo. R, B. Dykes, 20, Rio Hondo. Marie Atkinson, 0, Rio Hondo. Antonio Garcia, 7, Rio Hondo. A child named Kennedy, 7, Rio Hon c'o. Four unidentified Mexicans, Rio Hondo. Glen Maxon. 20, Los Fresnos. Cllvio Gonzales, 10 months, San Benito, Crus Rodriguez, 60, San Benito. Mrs. Tlllle Rlgdon, 67, near Har- Ungen. Patricio Garcia, Matamoros. ' Jesus Contreras, Matamoros. Marie Chong, Matamoros. Manuel Garcia, Matamoros. Rfijenduz FernaiyJez, Matamoros. Three unidentified, Matamoros. do McMillan r roves he CAN TAKE IT (CHEMISTRY) MANHATTAN, Kas. (fl5) Coach 'Bo" McMUltn of Kansas State won't be ineligible because of scholastic difficulties, if they ever start making mentors get passing grades. Although he hadn't taken a course since his Center College days, "Bo" went in for five hours of general chemistry ot summer school and knocked down on "A" grade. The emergency legislation is producing a flock of jobs for Bom? folks ancj it is to be hoped that they pass the benefits down the line. Most people are very pleasant as long as you don't try .to. collect. "V I'OKMEULY OF LA (iltAXDE Davo Brichoux was at one time proprietor of the Savoy hotel, about a quarter of a century ago, and was for several years a resident of La Grande previous to his first Im prisonment on a . murder charge 18 or more years ago. Car Is Stolen Here Wednesday Evening (Continued i.m Pags Onel ii Washington ';" ""Bj'"'Hi'rHerX Pliimmer WASHINGTON Now' that tho "new deal" has emerged victorious In ltd first court test, ono of tho most Important and significant phase or titS rteW administration's program has been reached. Jt ' was something worth watching when the oil refiners of Texas came Into the District 6T Columbia su preme court attacking the Industrial recovery act and asking tluit it be set aside. Hero was a Xest of onn of the most woltflity problems that have arisen slnco adoption of tlic co:istltu tlpn itself. ' fho roflneni complained that the president is exercising powers which ovust bo exercised by congress alone. And when their counAol was asked by the preHlding justice whether he thought the act was based; on federal powers over lutcrntato commorco or power given to tl federal govern ment to meet emergency conditions, htAnnswercd flatty. "Tho act can't bo sustained on any grounds." Then The Court Spoke But the court., it has developed, in dicated that It holds a) contrary view, by deciding that all laws, "Including tho constitution, shbuld bo read in emergencies in tho light of the law of necessity." The final decision, of courws , and ono which might mean that the pro gram of the "new deal" will either stand or fall nwts with the su preme court of tlie nation. It Is ihighly doubtful whether the supreme court will make a decision on the new laws any time soon. It's almost physically ImpoHMble. The court has ad jour nod until Octooer. With the facilities the Justices have at their disposal It would seem al most impossible for decisions affect ing tho "now deal" to be hnmlod down during tho "next seaslnn which cornea to a close In May. 10H4. Newsslty Or Precedent The philosophy of the court as It Is now constituted and as It has been revealed In decisions seems to many observers to bo liberal. Evem without tj.e presence of Oliver Wendell Holme on the bench this appears true. While no ona can predict what will happen to tho new laws when they do reach the court, some believe this will play a prominent part, ( Meanwhile, speculation continue, a to whether the Important govern menbu changes made by tho new ad-mlnlsti-aUon are to be passed upon finally by Justices having their eyes on present conditions and not (wholly on precedents. In this oonjiccUon the District of Columbia decision is wr-1 tain, to be jwhvLed to us significant. POET'S CORNER Hnvo you Rivcn'your beat, my brothor In tho struKglo of lile today? Hnvo you helped aomo woary traveler Aa lie u-cnt 011 Ills wenry way? Ill the world's broad field of battle nave you given your best. I any? Aa you tolled In the day's fierce battle Did you glvo of your best today? Havo you given your best, my brother To make tlio world safe today? Did you carry tho lond ot the weaker As ho trudged along tho way? Then give of your best, my brother That the world may be freed from strife. And the Master will give you later A happy, eternal lire. (J11U) Total valuation of property In Utah for nsKcHlnent purposes was decrensed more than 4H,U00,000 or 8.4 per cent for loss. morning tn an alley nenr tho down town section. In good condition ex cept thnt the windshield had been removed from tho car. This Is tho third car theft here in tho last few days, with two other stolon automobiles recovered tho day after 'thcy were reported, missing. Word also has been received tluit n car belonging to E. U. Miles, who lives oii Cathorlne creek cast of Un ion, was stolen the other day. Fitzgerald W II.IIIXMIN V IIKIQN.S li!i VKAIIS THE WaOUE () Queen Wllllel mlna.'only woman ruler in tho clv-lllp-ert world, will celebrate tho 36th anniversary of her coronntlon on September 0, She was placed on the "throne on the death of her father November 33, 101)0, but was un-.1cr tho regency of her mother. Queen Jmmn. until she became 18 years of age on August 31, 1H08. Hcjl Crops Drug Store La Grande's Most Popular Products Wherever you go you will find Meadow Harvest Butter ana Ueoco Eggs. Such popularity is. not undeserved. In the few years that these two necessary food products have been ou the market, they have gained such a wide reputation for always being- one of the best that can be had. Join the throngs that are using them . . . you, too, will soon be singing their praises. GRANDE RONDE CO OP CREAMERY ASS N. HUD0WHMVIST MTEH UCOCO 00 Jti Ihe kttcr Cmim thai makes itMrf 's Selected As Dealer for - - - ALUMINUM WASHERS $119.50 Above d Mod Hr?3l Pi3l35tSwS ill M jfaaaawwwHjj j rvpCSl VfaftiiaSaif I LlJ Above Mod :; $79.50 For La Grande and Vicinity and we are proud to be chosen as your Maytag Dealer Not only a new dealer, but a new deal for women the great est washer value ever offered by Maytag. WE OFFER THESE WASHERS TO LA GRANDE WOMEN AT PRICES SAME AS ADVERTISED RECENTLY IN PORTLAND! We secured a limted number of floor samples of these fam ous washers and offer them to you at about wholesale cost! This is the first time in history that Maytags have been offered at these low prices . . . and probably the last , for when this supply is exhausted, it will be impossible to replace them at such low figures ! i Model "A" Regularly $149.00 Now Offered hy Fitzgerald's, at The latest and most famous model, with c;ust aluminum tub, precision steel cut Rears sealed in oil, automobile gearshift control and all other outstanding Maytag features, including the one and only Maytag water remover, with large soft rolls insuring safe and adequate flushing of soiled water from the clothes. The fastest' strongest washer you could buy . . . and at a saving of 29.50. ' Model "90" Regularly $124.00 Now Offered by Fitzgerald's at $99-50 This is the model with the cast aluminum tub that gained leadership for Maytag Equipped with divided water remover and big balloon rolls. Model "15" Regularly $89.50 Now Offered by Fitzgerald's at Just 11 limited numlKJr of this type, with porcelain tubs, oil-packed gears and gen eral, fine Maytag construction. $7950 Also See the New Model "10" at $74.50 Wl OO OUft PARI ITZGERALD'Q FURNITURE COMPANY Friends And Furniture Our Business Wl DO OU UT