Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1915)
(THIRD ANNUA SPECIAL FOX TWO DAYS 4 Buckle Arties Heavy Rolled Sole . . : V . . . $1.75 1 Buckle Heavy Sole . $1.25 Tur nmr rrov Andrews bros 1 1 lli 1 VUUiIV mm hog dm - ; to the bacon type, while some are RAISER CAN'T MISS THE MARK fiather earlier maturing than others.' . VERY FFAR. 1 :But the main consideration in select- . ir.g the breed is to- choose the one O. A. C Expert Finds Breeder's Own that suits the breeded's ideas and Fancies Only Guide. j purposes best, and then stick' to it : . ' i and build it up by careful selection In starting ihog raising growers and proper management. ;..',.. , . need not be concerned very serious- i : ly about the breed of hogs they select,! When by-na girls on the farm according to the O. A. C. Animal are teuht to recognize and appre .. ciate the beauty of their natural sur FEW FOLKS HAVE Well-known local druggist.says cvery 'body is. using old-time recipe of Sage Tea ' and Sulphur. : GRAY NOW Hair tlint low its color and lustre, or - ) when it fades, turns gray, 111111 ""' life- lean, I caused by a Inck of sulphur in the hair. Our grumbuutlier made up a mix ture of Sage 'J'ea ami Sulphur to keep her loeki dark nnd beautiful, and thou - sands of women and men who value Unit even color, that beautiful dark shade of , hair which-! ho attractive, line only this old-time recipe. ' ' . . Nowadays wo get thin famous mixture by asking at any drup store for a AO cent bottle of "Wvoth n Snip nnit Sul phur Huir Reined'," which darkens the hair so nuturnlly, so evenly,1 that nobody I the O, A, C. garden specialist, "at- .11.1 X.. II 1 1. I 11 ' J !..!.. .. - . . . . . ., can iwmtlblv tell it 1ms lieen niiplied, lie- idea, it toJi'ca off dnndruM', Ktnp snilp itchlne and fallinir Imir. You hint dampen a sponge or soft hrusii with it nnd draw this through your linir. taking one small ntnmil lit 11 time., By morn ing the gray, huir disappears: hut what ' delights the Indies with Wycth's Rage : and Sulphur is tliut, lieaides beautifully darkening the Imir after a few applies tion, it alan brings buck the (rlomi nnd lustre and gives it an appearance of abundance. Adv. 1 ty fjh ? J? f? fj? fj? 4h 4? f? fi? Good Goods - Good Service C. J. BLACK i Successor Cumxamgs tt i J Golden West Coffee Steel Cut, No Chaff, No Dust No matter how made, its always Clear. Just Right Phone Main 16 L CASH SALE 1 La Grande. Ore. Husbandry department. Each of the ; ; three principal breeds in Oregon, Po lancl China, Berkshire and Duroc Jer sey, has its points of superiority and there is said to be about as much dif ference in ' individuals as between greeds. Some run more to the fat ihog and lard type, and orWs more roundings, even of their., tools and implements of every-dlay employment, there will be no further need of the back-tot he-land movement. - The I young people who should for their fownand their " country's good stay ' on the farms will generally do so. The i plans dotnot contemplate making art I : .. k .. . 1.. u future citizens of the state to know and value the rich beauty of nature and of well-made instruments of in dustry. '. y ' ' . ' Although no state in the Union af fords better climatic or soil conditions ofr market gardening or truck farm ing than Oregon, yet it has always been -a vegetable importing state. "Carloads of produce come to our markets annually from outside sourc- es," says Professor A.' G. Bouquet, thougQi a Targe share of it could just as well as not be grown in this stato. The smaller markets are the ones most neglected, the average grower directing his attention more toward sucty marjeets as Portland, always liable to market troubles, due to heed less consigning and to the marketing are in a somewhat crude condition but are now undergoing rapid) devel opment, and there are big opportuni fa 1? to Black Lb. 40c La Grande ties in the vegetable business when All accounts owing to the Geo A. riehtlv manaired " -Anderson company are now in the ngrntiy managed. ,,.. hands of M. vTMifford for eollee- Sudan Grass is Good. , .: tion, and parties owing the company wo,iWi. n r Jan 14 m-j can Py eir ccounts t the old lo v Washington, D. C., Jan. 14. (Ji company m J Gardi- Observer Washington Represents- ier building. Adv. .. 1 2 tf. tive.) Will Sudan grass ' the great 2,.;. v: L-Z-- new forage, crop discovered y j:4.ev American in- Africa in 1909 grow in 1 4, . . g RIESLAND, !; urcfron. m mi w pufc F w experimenters , in Oregon to deter--mine that A few packages of the seed with full directions for growing the same have . been allotted by , the Bureau of Plant ' Industry to each of ; Oregon's representatives' in ' con gress and will be given out by them 83 long as they last to those applying for the .same and promising to give same a fair trial. Tests were made from that spoon ful, of seed send from the land of the pyramids , to ! Texas - in 1909. The stories of' success read like fairy tales. - The hay from the grass is more abundant than that of any for age crop known. 'will fit. in and rotate with any crop. , It grows fast er than weeds and chokes there out. It grows as wel In arid land as in Webfoot It is a grat fattener .for forage eatjng' animals. Best of all it is very inexpensive .in cultivation. Those errthusistic about tt claim that it is the farmer's greatest blessim. It is thought that it will grow in every part of the United States; ex cept the "far north." ' ' THE REAL RUSSIA. H Is Confined to a Vary Small fteotian of the Vast Emoire. In "The ftu-siau Empire. Today and Testerduy." Nevln O. Winter says: "In a strict seiim. real Uussia cov ers only a portion of tbe more tbun 2,000,000 square miles that He within the borders of tbe .continent Tbls narrower definition would ' certainly jllminnte Kinliiud. I'olund. the Baltic provinces, : Bessarabia and tbe Caucs sua and probably a part of the land of the Don Cossacks, the jUiliueu and tbe sections bordering on tbe Arctic ocean ond the lower Volga. ' In other words, the real Russia lias developed within this narrower section, aud whatever of : Russian rharacteristlcs : appear in tbe eliminated sections have simply been Imposed by tbe conquerors upon a people alien by birth and language. "Tbe actunl visible influence of Tol stoy on Russia seems not to have been great He was beloved and reverenc ed by many, 'out no party claims or has ever claimed hlra as a leader. Tbe higher classes rejected him because of bis opposition to all established gov eminent; the peasantry were repelled by bis diatribes against religion; tbe revolutionists and anarchists repudiat ed his teaching because be. bad no definite plan to offer. His Influence on thought and opinion in Russia will not compare with his Influence in noa Russian nations." x PHOSPHITE NOT PHOSPHATE. The Propar Sodium Solution te Use In . . Bichloride Poisoning. In a recent Issue of a well known medical journal the statement is made that mercuric chloride poisoning can be trraitnd bv the use of sodium nho phate with excess of sodium, blear ' J Donate. Thus, 'editorially, tbe same i journal soys: "Tbls solution'. It Is claim-; J ed, instantly converts tbe bichloride to ' tbe mild chloride, wblcb can bo rcmov- J sa by a dose or castor on. it is very necessary tbat tbe sodium phosphate shall be chemically pure." "Attention should therefore again be called to tbe fact" says the Journal ot the American Medical Association, "that the names 'sodium phosphate and 'sodium phosphite' are so similar that a serious error csn be made by tbe misprinting or misinterpretation of a niuele letter. Sodium nbosDbite bas been suggested as nn antidote to mer-. J curie chloride because It acts as a re-! I ride Into calomolmercurous chloride 1 1 wbilo the phosphite Is changed to pbos- phate. Sodium phosphate will have no I such action on mercuric chloride be- j J cause it Is already as highly oxidised 1 s possible." 'HEART STRAW." - " Unusual Exertion May Cause It, and So May a Fit of Temmr. TO keep your temper, is rather a good idea, said Dr. Strickland Goodall In n lecture at the Institute of Hygiene. Every time tbe heart contracts, be said. Its force would raise a weight of two pounds to tbe belKht of one foot and It does this from TO to 140 times every minute. . Acute heart strain was difficult to produce In a young, well nourished and healthy adult but tt was very easy to produce If the heart muscle was an aemic or poisoned or wis the seat of degenerative disease. Running to catch a train Increased tbe heart's work by 228 toot pounds a minute. Ascending a staircase slowly Increased tbe heart's work by 112 foot pounds; ascending quickly by 1S2 foot pounds. Tho enormous amount of totnl extra work done by the heart was shown In the experiment of riding a bicycle up hill, the gradient of which was one In ten and the length 2.004 feet The ride occupied three and one-half minutes, and tbe total extra work done by the heart was no less than one sod one eighth foot tons. A rest of half an bonr dolly would ar in a yeaj 210.000 foot pounds of work on tbe heart London. Cbronlcl - Plasterer and Contractor. Cement work of all kinds, Foun- dations and Flue construction. Cement block specialty. Call and see these blocks at E. CO Davis' Marble ShopPbone Red S71. Our Own Grinding Plant 1 The ' mechanical work must be equally as careful as the examina tion itself. The arescription must be filled with Scientific Precision. This is done in our own Laboratory on the Premises, where we grind) mil of our own lenses. ; We guarantee our lenses to be absolutely correct, scientifically and mechanically. Fitting and Adjusting. The glasses must be made up in frames or mountings that will be suited to each, individual case. The appearance of the glasses, when worn, must be considered. - We provide mountings to harmonize with the features and give hand some and stylish effects. Specialties. . : v- We prescribe toric glasses when their use adds comfort. : When the eyes require different lenses for ner and distant vision,' we supply bifocals with an invisible dividing line, so that only a single pair of glasses is needed. We have all kinds of specialties in frames and nose pieces, shell frames, special designs and shapes to suit and fit. all requirements. - , J. H. PEARE & SON, La Grande's Leading Jewelers , and Optometrists: The front lace corset with the (tel. Trills Uuk. V. 8. I'll. Oma back J PRICES: $2.00, $3.50 $5 and up Mrs. Robt Pattison Corsetiere i Phone R. 3221 Res. 1702 Oak , The accounts of the Geo. A. Ander son company are due and payable to M. V. Mefford who has offices in the .former location of the company in the Gardinier buildine.Adv. " 1 2 tf. PLANING MILLS Cor. Greenwood and Madison St (Successor to Wenaha Lbr. Co ) ALL KINDS of custom planing done promptly. Our guaran tee behind every job of work. ssi wosis mmm wMwmm mm IH. A, ACKERT I 1 Pttofcooional FRATERNAL ORDERS. A. F. & A. M. La Grande Lodge No. 41, A. F. & A. M. holds i regular meetingsfirst and third Saturday t 7:80 p. m. Cordial welcome to 11 Masons. ... C. W. NOYES, W. M. A. C. WILUAMS, Sec. B. P. O. E. La Grande Lodge No- 433 Meets each Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in Elk's club, corner of De pot street and Washington avenue. Visiting brothers cordially invited to attend. M. B. DONOHUE, E. R. .' ' ADNA B. ROGEHS, Sec - WOODMEN OF THE WORLD La Grande Camp No. 169 meets every first and third Friday at K. of P. HalL All visiting neighbors wel comed. ' v. JOHN A. READ, C. C. J. H. KEENEY. Clerk. MODERN WOODMEN OF AMER ICA La Grande Camp No. 7708 meets on the first and third Thurs day evenings of each month in the K. of P. ball. Visiting neighbors welcome. H. C. BALL, V. C. W. F. LANDRUM, Clerk. ROYAL NEIGHBORS Iris Cam second and fourth Fri day afternoons, every month in K. of P. HalL All visiting members . cordially invited. NELLIE CHARBONEAU, Oracle. LILY C. KIMMELL, , ; ' . Recorder. REBEKAHS Crystal Lodge No. 50 meets every Tuesday evening in the I. O. O. F. hall. All visiting mem bers are invited to attend. , LOUISE DOUGLAS, N. G. ZOE GOLDEN, Sec. UNITED ARTISANS La Grande As sembly No. 30, meet regularly every first and third Tuesday of each month in the K. of P. hall. All visiting members are invited to at tend. F. R. SUYDAM, M. A. , NORA M. SHORT, Sec. . L O. O. M. La Grande Lodge No. ' 850, Loyal Order of Moose holds . regular meeting every Tuesday night at 7:30 in Moose Home on -Adams ave. Visitors adways wel come. '' - ANGUSSTEWART, Die. F. A, EPLING, Sec. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Red Cross Lodge No. 27 meets every Monday night in Castle hall (K. of P. hall). A Pythian welcome to all visiting Knights. , H. E. DIXON, C. C. HAL REES, K. of R. & S. K. OF L. OF SECURITY Mt, Em . ily Council No. 2646. Meets sec ond and fourth Wednesday even . ings at 8 o'clock in the FiftJi floor of the new Foley building. Viait ; ing members are welcome. - ANGUS STEWART, Pres. CLARENCE E. GRAVES, ' ' Fin. See. ROY E. GREEN, Red. Sec. O E. S. Hope Chanter No. 13. O E. S., holds stated communications the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month. Visitinir mAmrmrQ r,r. dially invited. - , MRS. A. C. WILLIAMS. W. M. MARY A. WARWICK, Sec. F. O. E. La Grande Aerie No. 259 - en each and every Friday evening at 8 o'clock in ton floor of New Foley building. Visiting members cordial ly welcomed. W. C. HANSEN, W. P. L. F. BELLINGER, Sec. WOMEN OF WOODCRAFT CIRCLE No. 47 Meet second and .fourth Tuesday nights of each month at Eagle's hall in Foley Buildine. All visiting neighbors welcome. LOUISE HILARY, G. N. LILLIE ALLSTOTT, Clerk. AiTrrirtNccDa TOM JOHNSON Auctioneer, makes a .specialty oi larmera' stock and machinery sales. "The man that gets you the money." Leave or ders at Observer office. All accounts owintr to the Geo. A. Anderson company are now in th hands of M. V. Mefford for coll,.. tion, and parties owing the comnanv can pay their accounts at th nA u. &e Hotel Oregon PORTLAND, OREGON CENTRALLY LOCATED AS TO BUSINESS AND ALL PLEASURE RESORTS The place where all Eastern Oregon people stop when m Portland. Mr. F. S. Bramwell is always on hand to greet his many friends. RATES , Large sanitary rooms, without bath $1.00 and upward with bath .... $1.50 and upward M. C. DICKINSON, General Manager.' F. S. BRAMWELL, Assistant General Manager When in Seattle, stop at the Hotel Seattle. We own it Pittectbtty j PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. - A L. RICHARDSON, M. D. Phyii- cian and Surgeon: over Hill's drug store. Phones: Office, Black 1362; residence, Main 55. DR. R. E. L. HOLT. Physician and . surgeon; successor to Dr. N. Moni tor; corner Adams avenue and De pot street Phones Office Main 68; Residence, Main 730. w .. . DR. M. K. HALL Physician and sur. feon. . Office West-Jacobson BMg. hone Main 63. Rooms 11-12-18., C. H. UPTON, Ph. G. M. D. Phys cian and Surgeon. Special atten tion to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Office in La Grande National Bank ' Building. Phones: Office Main 2; Residence Main 32. DR. H. L. UNDERWOOD Physiciari and surgeon. Diseases of the eye a specialty. ; DR. DORA J. UNDERWOOD Dis eases of women and children. Of ficesAdams avenue, over . Red Cross Drug Store. - EYE, EAR, NOSE. THROAT SPE CIALIST. DR. H. M. BOUVY Practice Halted exclusively to diseases and surgery of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Also the Fitting of Glasses. Office Wast Jacob soz 51dg- Office Phone Red 3431. Residence Red 2021. DENTIST. E. P. MOSSMAN Dentist: .. rooms 6 and 7 new West Building.' Phono Black 1521; Office Hours 8 to 12 a m., and 1 to 5 p. m. . - . OSTEOPATHS. DR. C. H. DAY Osteopath Phy sician. Over Lilly's Hardware Store Phone Main 63. 1 Residence phone Black 761. Successor to Dr. Zim merman. , .; CHIROPRACTOR, MYERS & KELLY Graduates ef Universal Chiropractic College ef Davenport, Iowa. Offices in New Foley Building. Phone Black 1871. VETERNIARY. DR. H. W. RILEY Graduate Vet erinarian Hospital, 1409 Madison Ave. State .Stallion Inspector, Stock Inspected for shipment Home Independent Phone. Black 41. Farmers Co-Operative Phone, Vfcln 17. . v ... : ATTORNEYS AT LAW. COCHRAN Sc EBERHARD Geo. T. coenran and uoion R. Eberhard Attorneys. La Grande National BtmK Bidg., La Grande. Oregon. T. H. CRAWFbRD; ROBT. S. EAKIN nAwtuKU & rjAKlN"- Attor neys at law. Practice in all the courts of the state and United States. -Office West-Jacobson build ing, La Grande, Ore., rooms 9-10. R J. GREEN Attorney r Rooms 9-10, Sommer Bldg., La Grande, Ore. Practices in all :tato and Federal courts. UNDERTAKERS. W. H. BOHNENKAMP CO., Un dertaking and Embalming. Strictly modem. Day phone, Black 241. Night phone Red 3971 or Red 8412. J. C. HENRY Undertaker and Rm- balmer; 20 years in business. Day; phone, Main 62; night phones, Re 3131, Red 562, Black 3811. - v. war taiv lam,. TO AtUiiAnta anw11ii 4k -IJ Wtntar term, nnvinop nn M.t.tMo tion m advance . Write for particu- BAKER BUSINESS COLLEGE. kj w. v. KINOM, Prop- Adv- 12 26 e d tf. . -- wiuuiiny m xne rarsi- mer buikhnir. AH i - Hl Grade Job Printing costs no mora than tli ti... t-tj m