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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 1912)
LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1912. PAGE 2 A Girl's Wild Midnight Hide. To warn people of a fearful forest re"ln the Catskllls a young girl rode liorBeback at midnight and saved many lives. Her deed was glorlouB but lives are often saved by Dr. King's New Discovery In curing lung trouble, ana coughs and colds, which might have ended In consumption or pneumonia. "It cured me of a dreadful cough ana lung disease," writes W. R. Patterson, Wellington. Tex., "after four in our family had died with consumption, and I gained 87 pounds." Nothing bo sure and safe for all throat and lung trou bles. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bot tle free. Guaranteed by all dealers. Treasurer's Call for OHy Warrants. Notice Is hereby given that there are now funds on nana to pay an um Undlng warrants on general fund of la, Grande city up to and Including No. 9327. Endorsed Interest on all warrants on general fund from No. 9021 to No. 9327 Inclus ive ceases from thlB date. La Grande, Oregon, Dec. 14, Mil. ROY W.LOGAN, City Treasurer. J. H. Richardson LSXivent E. S. Givens Investment Rear La Grande Nat'! Bank Real Estate, Loans. Insurance. High Class Invest ments and Securities UNION COUNTY f ABSTRACTS J J. R. OLIVER. Proprietor $ The Reliable Abstract firm Union County. of 22 4. 1 FIRE INSURANCE, MORTGAGE LOANS Oyster Shell 10 pound 25 cents And all other kinds of Poultry sup plies. Also Alfalfa Meal. Waters-Stanchfield Produce Co., Main 70-6 HAY. FEED, FLOUR, POULTRY Sl'ITLIES. WOOD 1527 JEFFERSON AVENUE Savoy Hotel EUROPEAN PLAN The rooms are good and Steam heated only one block from depot E. E. Myers, Prop. I- For WOOD AND COAL 1 Phone Main 6 Co. HMDS BILL IS GIVEN SUPPORT BY MM ELEMENTS Chicago, Jan. 17. (Special) Navi gation, protection against floods and reclamation of arid and swamp lands all will gain throughout the United Stales tremendously by enactment of the Newlands bill In congress; this was the declaration of the annual meeting of the American Reclamation Federation in Chicago with particular reference to the April 10-13 session in New Orleans of the National Drainage congress. The president of the feder ation in his report said: "It Is the aim of Senator Newlands to completely ac complish the reclamation of all arid and semi arid and all swamp and ov erflow lands by building irrigation and drainage works that will directly in fluence and regulate the flow and nav igability of our rivers; and this, gen tlemen, is our ambition the serving of our country by preserving the" pub lie health and public wealth and ad- j vanclng, so. far as lies In our power, the proper reclamation, the proper conservation and the proper utiliza tion of our public resources. Let us endorse Senator Newlands In his de clared effort to regulate and practi ! cally standardize the flow of the great 'navleable rivers of the country and tbelr tributaries and In bo doing and as a means to that end, protect from destructive floods the cities and com munities, the farms and plantations that line tbelr banks; to control for beneficial use by storage In surface Leservolrs and in the ground the flood waters that now cause such appalling waste and destruction, and develop all available water power, fertilize the i land by silt deposit, and Irrigate tne deserts: save the country from the enormous annual losses from forest fires which devastate and denude our mountains and dry up the sources of water for our rivers, and thus largely relieve our swamp and overflow lands by removing the crest of the flood," The National Drainage company was organized In Decemebr in Chicago un der the auspices of the Reclamation Federation. "A homesteader's victory after a long fight," was the comment of a ' Chicago friend of the man who won 1 the championship wheat, the $1,000 prize at the New York land show, hav ing repaid him for his investment in pioneer days. Senger Wheeler of Eos thern, Saskatchewan, who won the Sir Thomas Shaukhnessy prize offered for the beat wheat grown on the two American continents. 25 years ago P?w8 working with a construction gan ftl 1 ti. n..nj nui' iinnplnw "When U 11 U1C lauivau " " -" " - ' wtioninr wnn set to drivinz a team hitched to straner he suddenly dis (covered a hew ambition,' hi friend related. "The team Inspired it. He decided ho wanted 10 ho a farmer and two years later M and hlB brothers took up A homestead near Clark's Crossing, north of Saskatoon. Thnt was In the days before the railroads mid although the crops were fair there was no market for the wheat when he had raised It. Consequently this did not suit the young: farmer and he and his brothers and his moth er moved tc a farm near the railroad at ltosthern. Wheeler had mighty little money but faith In the coun try and he bought a farm from the railroad npent at n price of $:t-00 nn aero. Consequently the $1,000 prize paid for the best hard rod spring or winter wheat grown In the two Am erican about repaid Wheeler for the price lie. paid to the railroad for his farm. The reputation he has made has enabled Wheeler to sell 100 bush els of his wheat nt a price per bushel for seed that amounted to more than his farm cost him and It Is said thnt lie could have obtained any price he wished to name. Ills good farming has not been confined to wheat for ho won a prize for the best kept farm In his district In what was called a "good farms competition." W. J. Class Turkey Red wheat was a close second, Indeed his entry tipped the scales one pound per bushel more than thnt of Mr. Wheoler's Marquis variety, but tho latter grain was awarded the premium by the Judges on account of its color and uniform ity. It was no chance, no accident that Wheeler carried off the coveted trophy It was Just downright, com- i nmn or garden, everyday hard work. I hacked up by Intelligent study, keen Jl'ST RECEIVED. A complete line of now models In the (Jos"'. I corsets. Trices from fa.:o to JllilS. ItOllT. lVTTIS0 Flioiio liliuk UM. (ursctlore. enthusiasm and dogged perseverance. He Bat up nights hand-picking his seed while other farmers slept. A ban on "making up time" when steam or electric trains become 'belat ed will be proposed during this con gress as a means to prevent loss of life, limb and property which the Leaeue for Public Safety In Chicago has found to be the greatest item of waste suffered by railroad stockhold ers as well as the public. This ban has been adopted in Canada with suc cess, the result being more uniform speed and more thorough organization, against delays and disaster. A bulle tin of the league declares: "It has been demonstrated that the number of casualties with their attendant ex-, pense can be reduced between 30 and 40 per cent In steam railroading op erations by the adoption of a com commlttee of safety plan which this league recommended last year and which has more than met the expecta tions of roads which bave adopted It. There are many other necessary steps to be taken In reducing the enormous Iosb involved In the present dlscredtt ie record of American railroads when compared with those of Eng land, France and Germany. The ex cuse that the loss of life and limb is due to high speeds demanded by the public is demolished by the fact that that United ' States Is fourth among the countries In the average speed of Its railroad trains. There Is a large amount of reckless running permitted and even required of train crews In order to make 'schedule time, no mat ter what risk may be Involved in do ing It. The record of wrecks shows that making' up time Is a prolific soruce of disaster. In Canada it has been stopped and the net result has been closer attention to uniform speed on all divisions, greater precaution and closer Inspection of rolling stock and motive power because railroads In competition muBt mnke good time." fieporta indicate that the present con gress is in a mood to protect the pub lic and the abolition of the so-called board of experts of the lnterestate commerce commission promises to hasten rather than retard progressive steps in this country in safeguarding passenger and freight traffic. Although the Interstate commerce commission's reports do not fully cover the cause or accidents, figures have been specially compiled from Its reports which will serve to show what needs are greatest for the protection of the public, WANTED MORE ACTION. And th Lioness Kindly Obliged the Motion Pioture Hunter. Taul J. Hniney writes in tue Outing Magazine: "The lioness was a picture to watch. She kept turning up her Up and growl ing savagely and once or twice made as if to charge.. .This lasted four or five minutes mid then Uemuient said be wanted more action and told one of bis camera boys to throw a stone at her., The boy threw the stone, and we also got the actlou. She watched the stone roll past tier and theu, without even looking back and without warn ing whatsoever, she charged straight In. "Never before In my life have I seen anything come so fast, it was all over in the twinkling ot nn eye. It seem ed to nie that when she tlrst started she had her eye directly on me. but caught sight ot the camera two or three yards to my left and charged straight lor that. I shot her full In tlie chest when she had come probably llt'loen yards, but without any nppar cut effect. She came on with her low. quick glide until she was within tif tcen feet trntn the camera, when she arose to strike It with Her paw. I think lleumient. almost up to this time, had been turning the crank, but now he convulsively pulled the cam era over on to himself for protection. "It was a terrible moment I knew she would have him before I could get another cartridge Into my gun. but I had nor reckoned on Klack. who was sitting on the ground nt my right, and Just as she was about to strike lie shot her over the left eye with his .470 The rate at which she was traveling carried her to within six feet of the machine when she fell dead. On ex amination we found thai my bullet had passed square through ber lungs from left to right and had lodged un der the skin over her right ribs." Muiio Kilts Men Young. Tainting mid sculpture are rondo clve to long life. Yet music kills men young. Schubert, with all his wealth of song, died at thirty-one; Mozart, who danced and laughed his melodies Into being, died at thirty-five, the same age as Hclliiil: Htzet, the composer of, "Carmen." died, like Turrell. at thirty seven; .Mendelssohn survived to thirty eight; Chopin, who loved lire so weil. had dune with It at thirty-nine, while Weber expired nt the age ot Torty and Schumann al forty-six. lint Verdi lived and nourished as n nonageunrinn. "-Uinilou Standard. ELECTRICJERMS. The Units of Measurement and What They Mean. AMPERES, VOLTS AND WATTS. Broadly Speaking, Amperes Indloete Volume, yolte Measure Pressure and Watts 8how the Reiulting Quantity. The Kilowatt Hour. It baa been estimated that the time and labor wasted by those engaged in Belling electricity In trying to make tbelr customers understand a kilowatt would suffice to build a string of pyra mids from New Vork to Sao Francisco, writes Allen Bollls. Tbe discouraging feature of tbe task Is that after all this effort tbe customer still remains igno rant and cherishes tbe delusion that tbe method of electric measurement Is a devious device fur concealing nefari ous practices by tbe electric light com panies. The average American la perfectly satisfied to buy gas by the foot trans portation by tbe mile and telephones by tbe month, but watts look suspicious and kilowatts totally depraved. This dlUlculty might bave been avoided If tbe eminent scientists who first adopt ed these accurate and to them conven ient terms bad been willing to show tbe rest .of tbe world -bow to compute electric quantity in feet and Incbea or barrels and quarts. Larking this, peo ple are left to struggle with tbelr my terloui method of measurements.' The kilo Is an old friend tor ancient enemy. If yon wtlli borrowed from the metric system. This leads to tbe definition of a watt. Bat In order to know watts one most first learn a boot tbe two other mem-' bers of tbe family, amperes and volts, Broadly speaking, amperes measure volume, volts pressure and watts tbe resulting quantity.. In order to get a tangible Idea of tbe ampere, electricity may be com pared with water flowing through a pipe, in this Illustration the ampere will represent the volume of water, which is determined hy the size of the pipe, but this should not be confused with the size of the electric wire, wblcb baa notblng to do with the pres ent problem. Tbe ampere then meas ures tbe volume of current flowing in tbe wire at a given time. The qunnti ty of energy flowing will depend upon tbe other factor, which is expressed in volts. The volt may be considered tbe meas ure of pressure or Intensity. In the Illustration of water flowing through a pipe the pressure is commonly express ed In pounds to the square Inch. With electric energy tbe same Idea Is ex pressed In volts. It Is evident thnt the quantity of water Mowing In a pipe of a given size will Increase as the pres sure Increases. In a similar way the quantity of electricity Increases In ex act proportion to the electric pressure of voltage, and this quantity Is meas ured hy watts. yThe qmttltlty (wattfn of electricity delivered over a single circuit Is the direct product of the volume lamperesi multiplied hy the pressure tvoltsi. In other words, amperes multiplied bi volts equals watts. The Illustration serves to Indicate the theory of electric measurement It Is likely, however, to he misleading un less the fact Is kept in mind that wa ler Is material, while electricity mani fests itself only through its on parity of affecting visible things It heats the filament tn un Incandescent lamp nud gives us light. It turns our motors, tt magnetizes telephone and telegraph instruments, but always It conceals Itg own. personality. in order to know what n watt ac tually Is It Is necessary to ascertain what It will do. A thousand Ikiloi watts are the mechilnieni equivalent of one and one-third uorsopower- that Is, a mechanical horsepower equals "41! wntts of energy. Lighting circuits usually carry 110 to I'JO volts. An or (Unary sixteen candle power lamp takes a little less than half an ampere In volume and consequently cousunies about fifty watts of current. Willi the tungsten lamp the rating by watts tn stead of candle power lias been Intro duced and bids fair to become uuiver sally adopted - Helng thus furnished with a stand ard of measurement it Is necessary only to multiply the amount employed icomnumly called "capacity"! by the number of hours of use to get the ac tual quantity cuv.s:: ::! In watt hours. The sixteen candle power lamp, with Its fifty watts capacity, consumes fifty watt hours each hour It Is used. The customary unit of consumption is the kilowatt hour. (1.000 watts used one houri. nud the lamp will consume this quantity In twenty hours. The or dinary electric meter ireeordlng watt meter! records automatically the num bcr of kilowatt hours used, being op erated by a mechanism which runs at a speed which corresponds to the ca paclty employed. ltollins' Magazine. Bismarck and No. 3. Bismarck held thnt three was the perfect number, for he had served three masters, he had three names, three oak leaves figure In his family arms, tie was concerned In three wars, lie signed three treaties of pence, In the Franco Trusslnn war he had three horses kill cd under him. he brought about the meeting of three emperors, he was re sponsible for the triple iillinnce. he had three children, his family motto ; was "Strength In trinity." ami caricsi i turtsts depicted him with three hairs I on his head. ! Error In Itself Is nlways Inviijble. IN nature Is tbe absence of llght-Jacotil. WAR ICED ON EGOS IS EFFECTIVE III NEW YORK New York, Jan. 17. Tbe vigorous campaign waged In this city last year against the use of stale eggs by bak ers, confectioners and otherB who are ! able to disguise them in their manu- lactured product apparently will be fought over again. The charge is made that the traffic In "rotB" and "spots" as they are known to the trade Is go ing on as extensively as ever. Pre sumably this Information Is accurate for It comes from the dealers In bad egs themselves.. Their business con sists In supplying these tainted pro ducts of the poultry yard In liquid or powder form to tanneries for use in the process of making leather and they complain that it is impossible for them to secure spoiled eggs for this purpose because they are going Into regular trade channels. As the receipts of aged and incom petent eggs amount to from 5,000 to 10,000 dozen weekly, it will be seen that the chances of the ordinary citi zen of coming into contact with them are rather too great for comfort. Un der the law the shipment of vicious eggs is permitted providing the cases are plainly marked to indicate the character of their conteutB. It is said that the markings are plainly visible up to the time; of the receipt of the eggs In Jersey City, but that on their way across the river to Manhattan the markings mysteriously disappear. w . ' New York, Jan. IV. On'iy 14,000,000 nickels now stand between this city and the completion of definite ar rangements for much needed additions to its subway system. This is the amount representing the fare of about 40,000 passengers daily that measures the difference between the negotla :ors representing the city and the In terborough subway lines as to the average rate of earnings to be used is a basis of payment to the operat ing company on Its present invest ment. The present subway has long been crowded beyond its normal ca pacity, and strong armed guards are employed to pack passengers Into the cars, Bardine fashion, during the rush, hours. The officials of the company insist that the return to be permitted to them on their investment should be based upon the number of passengers at present which runs close to a mil lion a day. The municipal representatives con tend that there is an abnormal con gestion which the new construction is Intended to correct. Inasmuch as the difference of opinion has been narrow ed down to $700,000 a year there Is hope that an agreement will be reach ed ultimately. The history of every new transportation line opened in New York In the past has been that It has been crowded from the beginning without an apparent diminution In the pressure on other routes and it seems probable that this will be the casej with the subways. New York. Jan. 17. (Special) With Us usual predellction for reduc ing every subject to statistical form, financial New York has been studying the monetary commission's report with a view to determining where will lie the control of the national reserve nssocition which wil be brought into existence to operate the banking sys tem if thrdctaoishrd-:S CM1S11UDLU tern of the country if the commis THE IDAHO JUNK HOUSE AT BOISE, IDAHO. S. KOPPEL, Proprietor wu.i. I'M r tui- rracES fou all klxds of metal and IUKUKK. I Ml, ATTENTION TO CONSIGNMENT SHIPMENTS. KEF IUK -i ItiHSE C1TI NATIONAL BANK. DRINK America's Best Mineral Water It's Good for What Ails You SALE OF STALE sion's recommendations are adopter As a. result they have figured out that New York City with over one fourth of all the banking resources of th i rountrv-will havA Iabd tT.nH ' I " "u ion nni. i-But lojjicDcuittuuu m me association and thatthe entire east with 60 per cent or me nation b nanking resource would elect less than half , that per. ueiuugu m me mreciuraie. On th other hand, the south which has about one fifth as large a proportion of the banking resources, would have prac tically the same representation as the west, and the west with about one quarter of the country's banking pow er would elect forty per cent of the. association's directors. The only possibility of section con trol oj the association, therefore, will be that of control by the west or by the south and west acting together. While there is some grumbling to the effect that New York as the leading financial center of the country fs Be ing treated unfairly by-, the projectors of the new measure, there is a gener-. al Incllnatlo nto accept , it. While It . entirely reconstitutes our present. I banking system,' It Is recognized is. marking a vast advance toward greatT er financial stability. Tbe only strong J opposition,, to tbe, new plan comes; I from. the. speculative element , ot tbe stock exchanges which foresees a ser-r-lous handicap to Its operations In the provisions discriminating1 against, loans with stocks and bonds as col- i lateral. . , V New YOrk, Jan. 17. The alarm that, prevailed for several days among tftei 'members of the Alimony club and' other men about town against whom claims have accumulated that they object to paying has been relieved by the opinion rendered by the corpora tion counsel of the city to the sheriff! that he is without authority to ap point women deputies. When Sheriff Harburger, who Is a warm advocate of the suffrage cause as well a? " Tammany leader, took: office on January 1st he Imiriediately announced that he intended to sur round himself with a dozen or mom skirted deputies and mentioned sev eral society ieaders as probable ap pointees. The men with constitutiona objections to paying their debts have, become adept at repelling the advane-' es of polite strangers of their own' sex, but the though that they would7 have to be on their guard lest every woman In massive willow-plumed hat and hobble skirt whom they chanced to meet might thrust a formidable le gal document upon them was almost enough to cause them to surrender and pay up. Now, however, the city's legal &v thority has come to their rescue by holding that women deputy sheriffs are not permlssable under the laws of New York and there is consequent relief along the Great White Way. Here is a remedy that will cure your cold. Why waste time and money ex perimenting when you can get a prep aration that has won a world-wide1 reputation by its cures of this disease and can always be depended upon? It is known everywhere as Chamber--Iain's Cough Remedy, and is a medi cine of real merit. For sale hy all dealers. o