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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1933)
Monday, September 25, 1933 Page Two LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER. LA GRANDE. ORE. (Incorporated) An Independent Newnpaper I'lione Main 000 H, W. FREDERICKS - HAROLD M. FINLAY Published evenings, exception Bunctay, at 1710 Sixth' street, La ; Grande, Oregon. Entered at the Postofflco of La. Qnindo, Oregon, as Second Class Mall Matter under act of March i, J870, OFFICIAL PAPER OF UNION COUNTY AND THE ; ! CITY OF LA QRANDB MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS - me Assocjaiea re&s is exclusively emuiuu iu uh iui puuuuuviuu . 01 all news diepatcnes credited to it or not oincrwise ureuiieu 11 jjuu llshed here. All rights of republication of special dispatches In this paper and also the local news herein alto are reserved, . National Advertising Representative M. C. MOOEN8EN CO., inc. i San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, Chicago ' ; ' Detroit, New York; SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Dally, one month In advance! Dally, six months In advance Dally, single copy lly Dally, per month in. advance.. Dally, per six months In advance . .Dally, per year In advance....,.:. FUTURE OF THE FOREST ARMY " Qne q the miost completely successful of all the items on the "new deal" program seems to be the forestry work of jHie Civilian Conservation .Corps. s True, there are instances .where complete success did not attend all camp efforts, but fiB a whole the coi-ps over the country has proven , not , only an unemployment aid but a distinct aid in forestry improve ment. '.- " . ' " .'. ,. , gome 300,000 young Americans who had no jobs and no .prospects of any jobs .last spring are hard at work, sending money home to their parents regularly, regaining heir own 'self-respect, .rebuilding their ;bodies and doing a job of work that will be of vast benefit to the nation for years ,to .come. " So well is the project working put that a person is .inclined to wonder if it .might not be a good thing to make this forest army a permanent affair. To begin with, it is very probable that the nation will have a reservoir of unemployed younjjr men for a good many years, no matter how fully prosperity returns. In the boom days ,of 1928 and 1929 we had more; ; jobless men than it was pleasant to think about; the jncreas ,ing use oif labor-saving devices makes it look as if unemploy ment will continue to be a problem for a long time. . f j Np pne needs to be told anything today about the demoralj ..izing effects of .Unemployment., No one needs to be. told tisab .thing about the eyjls of the dole. ..The one sure way to avoid 'those evils is to find, work for the men who need it; and .a permanent fores.t army would provide upwards of a quarter of a million extra jobs, year in and year out. ; All of this, qf course, would be pretty expensive, you can't feed, house, clothe and pay 250,600 men for a year without ,; spending a good deal of money. The federal government lu$ plenty of claims on its purse already. But it might be money well spent. t i ll) would be hard to overestimate the f inancial value of thfe work such an army could do if it stayed on the job year in and year out. To save the timber resources we have, to develop new ones, to prevent soil erosion, to prevent floods tho$e are jobs Wclj worth doing, even if they are costly. Certaiply the ciupstion deserves serious consideration. This forest army is too good an outfit to bo discarded offhand. FOREST SERVICE PLANS BUILDINGS j ENTERPRISE (8peclol)-Work wll ; begin nt onco on warehouse, storage flhcti 8, and bouses, oil tanks, garage and machine shops, bunk Iioubcs and i other buildings called1 for In specif l i cations for building government government buildings for tho U, 8. 'lorcst service. The building will bo ; erected on a block of ground ncquir ', c4 by tho government for that pur - peso last spring. Work will be done , by O. O. 0. boys and forest service . carpenters, and tho whole la expected : to bo completed bofore cold weather, i Headquarters lor the forest service of fice! in Enterprise will be, arranged itmd bids aro being asked from own '.era at vacant locations. The forest ser . vice will move from Wallowa to fin Itcrprlse the first of the year. Already ' some of the orilce holp and) foresters I have rented houses hero. EAGLES WILL ! HOLD FINALS I THIS EVENING ; Finals In the second series of Ennlc .broadcast will be held tonluht with the winners fn each Monday cve- niiiR'e program vicing for the grand ' championship audi other places for . cash prizes. The program will be pre ' sen ted at B o'clock at the Eagles hall and since a large crowd ts expected. participants aro requested to be at the hall early. Another series will start next Mon day evening under the direction of Arthur Bremer, and cash prlres will be awarded. The receipts from the : broadcast programs will be used to carry out the Eagles relief program. MRS. G. I. WADE SERIOUSLY ILL Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Smith, of ' ha Ornnde, were oalld to Caldwell . by the mmouj lllnras of her lter, Mm. O. I. Wade. Mrs. Wnde formerly mado her homo In the valley where Mr. Wnde had extennlre property In- Areata, U t Mfll PublUher and General Manager Business Marnier Carrier ,.-...u 75o - 4.3fi ..... .60 Mall 3.50 ,...-....6.00 Four Employes Of U, P. To Be Honored (Continued Prom Page Ono) grand march procodlng an evening of ola-tlmo and modern dancing. Honor Guoats at the ovent will in clude the following men who now nro nn the U. P. ponHlon roll: John J. Bcldln, La Qranc'e; Andrew B. Blood, Portland; Frank tirookler. Sll vorton: James IS. Hough, La Grande; Clmrloa E. Hnpnemott, Portland; Charles J. Hamilton, Pendleton; Frank M. Jackson, La Ornnde; Ed ward H. KlnBoy. Bolso: Edgar W. Myers, Bnlem; James F, McLaughlin, Pendleton: Jacob Nlbler, I41 Crando; Nels Nelson. La Ornnde: Filippo pic colo. La Orande; Gardner V. Sliep pard. Baker; eatnuel O. Smith. La Clrando; John T. Thatcher. Pendle ton; Peter J. TlileHen. La Orande and, Joseph A. Whitby, Eugene. 20,000 Witness Lqst Day of The Round-lfp (Continued tram Page One) j declared tho best all-around cowbdy, and Bob Crosby, ot Kenna. N. M , won honors as tho best steer roper. Shaw's larlet won him the further tide or beat calf roper in tho show. The bent bulldoggcr was Dick Truttt of Stonewall, Okla.. who won the title by taking two steers in 6H.3 seconds. ; Fay Olscn o( 8t, Helens won the cup given to tho northwest chnmpldn uiu-ktng horse rider. t Matilda SamiHtoii. vonm. ri.ij.i ol tho Umatilla reservation, was de clared tho most beautiful Indian gill at tho Ihnum-Up. First Snow of Fall ! On Nearby Hills (Continued From Page One) weather man predicting Inrrcailng cloudlnosa with mln Tuesday, a, though teniiwraturea somrwliat warmer tonight. At Portland the mercury dropped to 40. at Adess, Wash., 30, Condon 30. Pendleton 33, Batem 94. Baker 32. Wenntchee 30. Yakima 34, Wasco 30. Spokane 30 and Walla Walla 43. Oter hunters near Burns wer beating a hasty retreat from the hills because of cold weather and half an Inch of now fell at Hood Itlver, The Weather. WBATIIHIl FOHUCABT f Oregon: Iiitrwlii cJouUim'ws fol . lowed by mlu Tinwtliiy mut In the west portion loiiJjjIrt; fiumetvluit warmer tonight; lm-muiliiK ttoutheiut wliul offulioro becoming of gule force Into tonight. ' LOCAL WKATIIKH S tin day: maximum (JO, mtitliiiiim 3.1 above. Light froht. Cloitcly, Kulti ,5'i of Jnclu Today: minimum 37, 7 a. in. 3D above, partly cloudy. Indian Princess Queen of Women JHitch-Hikers Maoiy women hitcJi-hlkoru ore on tho roods these Uaye, but Princess Nttturtch. Saunders, a full-blooded Cherokee Indian, Relieves ohe Is In a class by herself. She Was in La Grande Saturday en route to Butte, Mont, after seeing the "Westward Ho" parade at the ( Pendleton Round-Up Saturday morn- lrwj, which she described as wonder- -During the lost four years the In dian womaii, attractive, trim and tn excellent health despite hor nearly 70 years of oge, has traveled 575,000 miles. She was reared In tho Tennes see mountain and for 10 years was the wlfo c an rngllsh contractor In Chattanooga, but after his death she was lolfc wlthoii-' funds. . : Hot knowing how to work, she turned t Iiltoh-niking and since then has been in every iu,te of the union, also Cuba, Mexico and Canada. From Uutte she Intends to go Into th- Da kotas .mi thou south again toward San Frnncisco. Later slie Intends to rr.s tho continent by the southern nuto to Miami, F.n. During her travels she reports very few unpleasant Incidents and In most. catiCB. she W treated vitn courtesy :sy those who fjlve her lifts. Sho a!.D 1b writing a book on travel and ad'; ture. She came thla way along tho Co lumbia River h'Khvay which she praised highly for Its scenic beauty, Sally Rand, ISnde Dancer, Sentenced But Still Dances CHICAGO, Sept. 25 UP) Despite a Joil sentence of one year for obscene dancing, Sally Rand continued today to present her fan dance at a Chicago theatro and at a Century of Progress show. The case has 'been appealed "Jail is for criminals, not dancers," Wie manager of tho theatre Eaid I "Three million persons have seen the j dance tills summer and none has j complained, while sho wears no ' olotheB sho is covered by two largo fans. Several other fan dancers liavo , appeaJ.eLrecen.tJy., but Phly J&dtX .has been arrested, Sho has boon served with warrants scores of times." JUDGE SAWYER IN LA GRANDE Judgo Robert Sawyer, editor or the Bend Bulletin, was a visitor in La i Grande Saturday afternoon. He was i en route to Enterprise where he wll visit his daughter, Mrs. A. G, Butter- field. Ho has been attending tho reclamation meeting at Baker. W. II. HAMMOND VISITS HERE William H. Hammond, of Salem, fs transacting business in La Grande. Mr. Hammond Is counseled with the state department In tho offtco of Sec- rotary of State Hoi E. Hoss, l COAT AND HAT ARE STOLEN A topcoat and hat belonging to Dr. John B. Bluckham was stoiMi from the L. D. 8. tabernacle about 8 O'clock Sunday night, It was reported to the police. FOR YOUR VISIT, .TO See the world's grfateat Kpectnclc at the peak o! its Rlory and Intercs:. Yuu can easily Mlord the trip low rcAind trip hires now in effect on the bue o! this moilcm, dependable system. ROUND TRIP $42.20 toCMcago STAfiK DEPOT Phono: Main '19 18th Amendment Voids for roponl In seven more states will knock tho prohibition amendment out of tho constitution, as Indicated by tho map above, In which states which havo voted wet aro "shown In white. Thoy iiumljor 29, Willi tho recont victories In Maine,. Maryland, Minne sota and Colorado.. States which have rot yet voted aro shown in black with election dates Indicated vhera Jtley havo been sot. Nino slates will vote on or before, Nov,. ,7, and. aro needed for adop tion of the repeal amendment Actual repeal must owait the meet. Iiik of tho rtlitli state convention ratlfyInktho amendment, which will be on Dec 6, If tho present overwhelming wet trend continues. TODAY AROUND AS CIIHOMCI.ED UV THE DAILY LEASED ffIK OF THE ASSOCIATED Pit ESS GEN. KILEA UOES EAST ' i SALEM, Sept. 25 Vn Brigadier General Thomas E, Bilca of tho Ore gon National Ouard, left hero to at tend the mooting of tho National Guard association nt Chicago begin ning September 28. While there he will also attend the session of the adjutant generals of tho United States, A1RPLANH CUASIIKS MEDFORD, Ore., Sept. 25 VP) No serious injuries wero reported! In ;the. United Air Linos plane crash at jthe Municipal airport Sunday when the landing gear of the Boeing twln motorcd passenger plane piloted by Grover Tyler was "wiped off" In an attempt to land In a light fog which covered the field. TEACHER HUICIHBS t SALEM, Sept. 25 (in A note stat ing she "was going away where IywiU be happy." was left by Miss Henrietta Hoyser, 45, Portland school teacher, whose body was found hanging from an old scarf In a building on her parents' farm here yesterday. TWO QUIT BANKING DEPARTMENT SALEM, Eept. 25 UP) The resig nations of H. O. Voget, assistant su perintendent and trust examine of ,tho. al.hulOufi.jRKWtipSPfcJin'l. M. W. Starbuck, senior bank ex aminer, were announcedi by Super intendent A. A. Schramm. Both are Joining the Federal Reserve bank staff at San Francisco. - Tlnkhom Gilbert and Edmund T. Way, deputies In- the department, have been promoted to succeed Voget and Starbuck. T. B.' Lumsden, form er Medford banker, and S, Dietrich have been added to the department. J TO HriU FISHING I.OlMiW ItOSEDURG, Ore., Sept. 25 (i1) Construction of a fishing lodge on the North Umpque river Is to- be started in tho near future by Zanc Oroy, world famous author and sportsman, according to a message received here this morning from Mr. ; Oroy. He lias secured a lease on tho site from the U. S. forest service, and plans to get out materials for the building during the winter months. Tho lodge la to be located at Maple Point where Steamboat creek and the North Umpqna river meet, 45 miles cost of Rascburg, directly across Steamboat creek from the ranger station. 1f- OF YOU THESE DAYS f.gSn IfM JiV: t" B I DON'T NEED GAS i4$f v .fpr ;l H SO OFTEN SINCE J ill ssSSrW ItA 1 bought this yM -iHinyaiffl n h rffc it ntf . Hi b I 11 ri ISHRlll. FROM all over the country come these en thusiastic reports. "Amazing how far it goes on a single filling of gns and oil!" says a doctor down in West Virginia. "Surprising gasoline mileage" writes a Pennsylvania man. "36,000 miles without having valves ground!" . . . "More tharj 10,000 miles without brake ad justments!" . . . "Had my Dodge 8 months and never have had springs oiled, but they don't squeak." These are just a few of the economy advantages Dodge owners stress. See for yourself how you can save money with the new Dodge Six! "Ask your dealer to L. C. May Die Dec. 6 IN Bm$F INAND DUMP TWINED INTO GARDEN LONG BEACH, Cal. M-Tho su perintendent and six employes of the municipal Incinerator utilized their spare .time to convert an unsightly dump and Junk grounds Into a beau tiful park, which tho city has named "El Dorado." Shrubs, cactus gar densdalilla beds, lawns and attrac tive walks now covor the ground whero onco old autos, cane and other debrla were thrown. .10111, IvSH MAY LAND ZEPPELIN MIAMI, Fla. W) Commander Hugo Ecklner has sent word that he do elres a ground crew of 600 men to land the Graf Zeppelin when tho ship arrives here Oct. 23. W. H. Green, in charge of unemployed forces In Dade county, says ho is pre pared to supply the men. More than 14,600 Indiana farmers have secured loans totaling $43,043, 840 from the federal land bank of j Louisville, Ky. Opposes Rolph Herbert C. Jones, ban Jose legis lator, dry, and public ownership exponent, ha3 announced his can didacy for the Republican guber natorial nomination in Califoinia, opposing Gov. Rolph. '.WTSr SMITH 9 Depot COMPANY E Will MUSTER TONIGHT Company B, : 186th Infantry, will muster for pay at 7:30 o'clock tonight after which the office force will pre pnro the payrolls for the first quar ter of the fiscal year, It was an nounced by Capt. W. A. Bean. Pay checks will arrive next month. Two vacancies now exist tn the company because of Rolltn Heassler's enlistment in the Navy and Howard Tiffany's enlistment in the Coast Artillery. The schedule for tonight Includes muster, close order drill by company officers, marksmanship by Sergeants George D. Oliver and Edwin J. Briggs, first aid by Lieut. Jesse V. Andrews, school of soldlor and) manual of arms by non-commissioned officers. Fol lowing the drill non-com school will be on the subject "Squad Drill" with Lieut. Andrews as Instructor, The outdoor range firing season is to close Oct. 31, the captain an nounced) and -by that time It Is plan ned to have 100 per cent qualifica tions with both small bore and .30 caliber rifle, and 10 per cent of the company qualified with the auto matic rifle. H. BENJAMIN MEETS DEATH DURING RIDE (Continued from Page One) The two young men. reared on ad joining farms at Cozad, had been picking Jionn at Salem, staying at the Ray McLaughin form. They were on their return trip to Nobraska. Benjamin's parents wired Van Nort wick a ticket this morning. The youth came to La Grande today and was questioned by Coroner George Walker, who announced there would be no inquest, that.lt was purely ac cidental death. The body was brought to La Grande by Prank Black, of Walker's Funeral Home, and Sergeant Dick Robertson, of the state police. The two young men boarded the freight train in La Grande, It was re ported. SOCIETY NOTES Twin Program At Ackerman' P. T. A. The first meeting oi the J. H. Ackjerman Parent Teacher associa tion will be held in the music room at the Normal school Thursday eve ning, Sept. 28 at 8 p. m., It was an nounced today. Tho program will be given by twins under the leadership of Mrs. E.. E. Hurley, who also is a twin. A social hour will follow . the program and' allow parents to make the acquaint ance of the teachers. All twins of the city especially are invited! to. attend. . m . ADVISES LIMIT CHAIN . FKO.M lilllirt'EItS FOR FKEI) WOOSTER, Ohio (IP) Wet brewers' grains, principal by-product of beer, now being offered to dairy farmers as an additional source of feed, should be limited to about 25 pounds a cay, fed In connection of hay and grain,, advises A. B. Perkins of the dairy department of Ohio experiment station here. General John H. Morgan, of Mor gan raider fame in the Civil war, was once a manufacturer of bagging at Lexington, Ky. Constipated 30 Years Aided By Old Remedy "For thirty years I had constipa tion. Souring food from stomach choked me. Since taking Adlcrika I am a new person. Constipation is n thing of the past." , Alice Burns. Red Cross Drug Store. Adv. say owners show you the startling comparison between Dodge and other cars on the "Show-Down" Plan basis. Get a free copy of the "Show Down" score card lets you check car values for yourself in an impartial, fair-arid -square wayl a.mm r n d fcto WW v F 0 B. FACTORY, with wtnnw n 1 13" Street COLORFUL ATTACK EXPECTED FROM ' GOLDEN BEAR 11 By W. A. Wells BERKELEY, Cai. VP) With some thing akin to a stratospheric forward pass rehearsed In spring football prac tice and several other innovations ready to spring on California's grid Iron foes. Coach W. A. "Navy Bill" In gram promises Golden Bear fans tho "most Interesting" team tne coast conference has seen in many years. Whether flnteresting" football If it fails -to lead to a conference cham pionship will placate the more ar dent alumni is another question, but those who have watched Ingram build his 1033 attack aro Inclined to agree with him that ho has planned a color ful type of game. First of all he has abandoned the huddle. Plays and shifts will work from sianal. with a short punt for mation predominating. There Is also a single wing back and a double wing back formation, but all snuis wm taka nlaca after the calling of signals has started and shifts and non-shift plays will start from identical line ups. Will lie More Colorful In Ingram's opinion, the huddle and the fixed shift havo both served to take some of the color out of foot ball and havo tended toward a rou tine attack. . More football strategy and greater versatility of ploys, he believes, will: result from returning to the system of entrusting to the quar terback the sole responsibility of di recting team play. Forward passing that utilizes the high jumping ability of two six foot, four inch ends Dave Meek and Harry Jones, returning letter men of 1032 ' is part of a more elaborate use of the aerial game which Ingram has prepared. The ball reaches the hands of the receiving end at an al titude of around 10 feet after a short toss. Versatile, If Nothing Else A heavy, smashing backficld will, if desired, olternato with a light, fast backtleld.u Quarterbacks will be sim ilarly varied. Versatility. Ingram de clares, will be California's predomin ating characteristic. California will continue the "double varsity" system inaugurated last sea son, with 36 men on each varsity squad. The first varsity will play seven of Its 10 scheduled games at j home. The seoond varsity will play i six out of seven games away from home. The first varsity opens its j coast conference quest against Wash ington State Oct. 21 and plays six games on successive weekends with out a break, finishing at Stanford Nov. 26. j As usual, there is a Gill on the team. There has been one since 1026, j when "Red" Gill made history at full j back. The last of the five football (brothers remaining on the squad is "Pinky" Gill, an end. s Must Price Yes, prices are surely on the way up. There wiH proltably never be a better time to buy a Maytag washer than right nou: The quality will always be high but prices may never again be so low. Sec the Maytag dealer. Choose your Maytag. Make the easy down payment that will place it in your home while prices are down. THE MAYTAG COMPANY Manufacturer NEWTON Founded 1893 IOWA or- IZGERALD'Q $7 Furniture Co. Fir & Adarns LOW WlCtS OH AIL MAVTAGS EQUIPPED WITH GASOLINE MULTI-MOTOR ACAPELLACHOIR WILL BE FORMED ' With the object ol organizing a clvlo A Cappella ohoir, a selected group of musicians will meet tomor row evening at, the Saoajawea Inn at 7:30 o'clock. Andrew Loney Jr., who has studied extensively In that field and who is a musical director of note, will direct the rehearuaJs. ... Only tho best voices will be utiliz ed toy the choir and to bo a member of such an organization is believed by tho director and sponsors to ho an honor, therefore attendance at,rc rohearsals, whloh will bo weekly, will be mandatory, ; TIDE Tl'HNS FISH TO FKItTIMZIMt fjBW natu-i, . j. yr) wnen shifts of tho tke killed thousands of small 'fish In the river near here, the coun ty agent notified his farmer friends to come haul them -homo for fertil izer. Trucks were busy for several days. , ( . One bushel of wheat will produco 42.6 pounds of flour, sufficient for 62 one-pound loaves of bread. "NOT CONSTIPATED FOR SEVEN WEEKS" ; i Writes Mrs. Johnaon After Using Kellogg's All-Bran Sufferers from constipation will be interested in this unsolicited letter: "Your Aix-Bban surely relieves constipation. I am so glad over the good it has done me that I feel X must write and tell you of it, "For lunch I take a banana, a large one. Six tablespoons of All Bran in a sauce dish, and dip banana at each bite until all is consumed. I havent been consti pated now for seven weeks." Mrs. Louise Johnson, 1483 Forest Street, Denver, Colorado. Constipation often causes head aches, loss of appetite and energy, sleeplessness. This condition is usually duo to lack of "bulk" to ex ercise the intestines, and vitamin B to further promote regular habits. Kellogg's All-Bhan has both, as well as iron for tho bleodi The "bulk" in All-Bran is much like that in leafy vegetables. With in the body, it forms a soft mass. Gently, it clears out tho wastes. Try All-Bran in place of patent medicines often harmful. Two tablespoonfuls daily will overcome most types of constipation. Chronic cases, with each meal. If not re lieved this way, see your doctor. Use as a cereal, or In cooking. Recipes on the red-and-green pack age. Sold by all grocers. Made by Kellogg m Battle Creek. r 1 SP-J0-23-M Phono Main 7701