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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 16, 1916)
111 fin Timi iiiiiiiiMTiii'iriiirwitiiitiiitiiiriiitMiiiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTmwMMiiiiii! mmm,, L GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1916.; PAGE TWO Good health is of inesti mable value; Never experi ment with Baking Powder of doubtful quality. Use, MOYAL BAKING POWDER " ' :: Absolutely Pure . . No Alum No Phosphate WHENCE GOMES TURKISH TOBACCO New York, lreb. U 'iayht you have wonderad where all file Turkish tobacco in our numberless brands of Turkish cigarets is coming from since the war 'closed the Turkish ports. Vice President W. 0. O'Brien of the American Tobacco company, in an swer to an inquiry, told all about it today, saying in part: "The smoker of genuine Turkish clgurets 1 mean cigarets made by the larger manufacturers and in which nothing is used but pure Turkish to- bacco need fear no adulteration 01 their favorites until 1918, at least, because a 3 years' supply of Turkish tobacco is kept constantly on hand in . the curing process. It is only in the Inst few months that the normal im portation of Turkish tobacco hus de creased and we hope and believe that before we begin to suffer a real short age we will be able to replenish our stocks from growers who have cured the tobacco in Turkey under the direc tion of our experts, so it can be used immediately we got it over here. "Contrary to tho general belief, the war has not entirely cut off Turkish tobacco Importations;' It is true that tho 20 to Zii million ipoundu annually imported to the United States from Turmy haB dropped in the lust year to u little over one million pounds and there seems no immediate prospect of getting more soon, but a littlo is coming in all tho time through the ports of Greece. "We hope this shortuge will not mean a rise in the prices of pure Turk ish cigarets and personally, at this time, 1 do not beliovo it will mean un increased price, but no one .knows wlmt the situation will be later. The to bncco man hardest hit by the short age is'' the little manufacturer who buys in Btnall lots from the bigger fellows from timie to time. Their sup wus cut off very eoon after the war bogun and, as they cannot afford to pay the price of what little Turk ish tobacco is imported, they have either to boost their prices, substitute a cheap domestic tobacco, or go out of business. Many of them have fail ed and are failing every day just for this Mason. Some of them are using cheaper tobaccos. ' "There is nothing in tho appearance of a cigaret tobacco that would show the layman that even 20 per cent of his'so-called pure Turkish cigaret was a domestic substitute, 'tout a regular smoker of Turkish cigarets could toll at the first whiff if even so much as 2 per cent of his cigaret is domestic leaf." , t ! J ! f ! 'J PECULIARITIES OF WAR. j ! f ! j j. King's Servant Disappear "Nothing more was ever heard of them.. They charged into the forest and were lost to sight and sound. Not one of thorn over came back." Sir Ian Hamilton's report. It is tho talk of England, the groat eat mystery of the war, the charge of the Fifth Norfolks, the King's own servants, at Anafarta. Tho story of how these 2(i6 "ardent souls" charged on through the village of Anafarta and completely varnished into tho forest of death" beyond, U history that some day may take its place be sides that of the immortal tale of Bnlaklava. The "Lost Legion," it is called to day, but until the war is over the fate of tho men who sent to battle from i the King's Sandringham estates can not be told. The King personally naa instituted every possible inquiry. The American embassy in Constant inople has asked tho Turkish govern ment. The forest through which the "Lost Legion" swept on in Gallipoli lias boon sonrched time ' and time ngiri. There have been found no bodies no graves,- no sign, except two small pocketbooks, the property of Captain William Beck, who commanded the Legion. Captain Beck is missing with alL of hi? command. Meantime scores of cottage homes in the royal Sundringham estates of Wsst Norfolk a-e in mourning. Wlvos sweethearts mothers, are wearing crepe, but despite all this there is ever the hope that some day the boys will come marching home. "Perhaps they are prisioners of the Turks; perhaps they weren't killed at all, and perhaps" it's tho hope against hope of the women of West Norfolk. The "Lost Ixjgion" received its bap tism of fire before it set foot on Turkish coil. It arrived off Sulva Br.y AuT'ist 10th aboard 'the palatial Aquitnniu from England. Turkish machine guns and artillery ploughed the water about them as they were being truiraportcd to shore, where thejA landed safely and dug themselves in. Two days later tho men were ordered to clear the Turks from Anafarta. Colonel Beauchamp was at their head with Captain Beck. The attack I developed rapidly. Enfiladed by Turkish fire, many of them dropped wounded or dead, but tho others swept on through the village and into obli vion. News has filtered through via Swit zerland that thirteen of those who charged through Anafarta are prison ers in Constantinople. But it has de veloped that these men fell wounded before the mysterious darkness of the forest was reached . Long before Gallipoli was evacuated the Mystery Forest was retaken by the Turks. This event sealed the puzzle tighter than ever. Among those who charged with Captain, organizer of the Legion and for twoi.'ty yoa-s the King's .cctite agent, were the King's plumber, gar diner, iramekeopcr. woodman, coif foreman and scores of men in lesser positions. Liko their fathers and their fathers'' fathers they had been born royal servants. Every Sunday in all tho 'parish churches now prayers are said for the safe return of the missing ones. In every cottage is a recent message from the king: "I heartily sympathize with you who are loft in suspense but I am proud thr.t the battalion foiierht so splendidly.". COFFEE In the cottage or mansion in the club or cafe in the hotel or apartment and on shipboard or on the Limited de Luxe, there, and wherever exacting coffee drinkers congregate, you'll find GoldenWest Coffee The purest, most delicious and most healthful coffee. Order of YOUR grocer. Full weight Always fresh. Economical. FUNNY. MONEY IN CHINA. Getting or Milking Chang U a 8or . Trial to a Foreigner. , i A dollar of bur money In Chinese cash weight eighteen pounds. Iu Chentefu, which is a small village where white people seldom go. 1 was going nloug with my guide when I sow a small peddler beside the street with some line Peking pears. 1 bought six of them for 2V4 cents and in payment gave the street peddler a twenty ccut piece. He turned It over and over and tested It with bis thumb nail, which was Buroly mndo for the purpose. The peddler gave back the coin and said that ho would not take It. The guide asked ltiui why, and lie explained that bo had never seen any such money and that it might be bad. So I bad to dig up somo copjiers. In all bis life tlje peddler had never seen n piece of slTvo'r money. There are thousands and thousands of people In China whose financial dealings nev er amount to enough to have it put luto silver, who are born, grow old and pass to their reward without ever h.av. Ing seen a piece of sliver. All Cliinu is suspicious about money. Every time you put down a dime or a piece of silver the other person tests It before he will take it, ringing it on the counter or on the pavement You can't give a merchant the right amount of change and walk off. He won't let you leave until ho has tested every piece, and he always gives back one or two pieces. He wouldn't think very much of himself as a merchunt If be didn't refuse some of your money. If you buy something lu one part of a store, get your change and walk to another counter and buy something else nnd give the change that Ms just been given yon I tie second clerk on general principles will refuse part of it Before you buy anything your money has to have the once over. Sometimes it Is maddening to have to wait while your money is tested. One day 1 rush ed up to catch a train with Just a min uto to spare. One of my dollars was bad, and before change could be made the train had rumbled off into the si lent night without me. But iu a few minutes the silence was broken bro ken beyond repair by an impulsive young man 0,000 miles from home who put his whole soul Into one mighty Missouri effort. Homer Croy lu Les lie's. ; LIFE OF A PEARL Closset & Devers Portland, Oregon 40c lb. 31bs. $1.10 A Good Jewel Never Gets Sick Nor Dull, Says an Export. . In bis book, "The Magic of Jewels and Charms," George If. Kunz, tho Jewel expert, explodes tho sick pearl fallacy. Ho says: "For years a statement bus been go ing through tho press that pen rid nre liable to become diseased nnd die and thiit the famous necklace of pearls pre sented by President Thiers of France to his wife and bequeathed by Mme. Thiers to the French government had lost their luster and died, perhaps ow ing to tho death of the owner. For thero is an old belief that pearls, as well as opals and turquoises, lose some of their luster when the owner or wearer becomes 111 and chunge to a dull and lifeless hue when the owner dles.v r "An examination of the necklace by the writer showed that the pearls were In good condition, nnd to confirm bis statement to this effect he had the di rector of the Louvre museum write him a letter. In this otllclal communi cation the director not only states that the pearls had not sickened and died, but that they were in us hanlthy' a condition as they had ever been. "Tho Invariable experience of tho writer has been that whenever pearls havo been snld to hnve suffered in this way the truo explunutlon has been that they were old and poor at the time of their purchase nnd that this romnnce was started on its travels as an excuse to cover up the defect of such pearls and to arouse the belief that tbey had been remarkably beautiful nnd valu able when tbey were originally ac quired." The Cart Before the Horse. Mr. Uarberd had a Jewel of a serv ant called Johanna. One day be found his bedroom a foot deep in old and muddy ten leaves. Johanna explained, "Tho missus said I made such a dust when I swept the floor and that I must put.tea loaves all over the carpet, so I emptied the old barrel standing by tho kitchen door, and I put them on the floor like missus said, master, after I had swept the carpet" London Tele graph. Burled Alive. In the early history of Japan it was decidedly a dubious honor to be closely related to any person of note, for one of the lows at that time decreed that when a person of rank or importance died all Immediate relatives must be burled alive in a rerpcndlcular posi tion around tho personage's grave. Their heads were left above the earth, and thus they remained until welcome death came to free them. Qulok Lunch Episode. "You tip the' waiter, nnd I don't" "Well?" "Yet he gave us both the same amount of clam chowder." "You are unobservant my friend. Ho dipped yours from the top nnd mine from the bottom, whore tho ingredients are." Loulavllle Courier-Journal. Milton Has Proud War Record Horton, Buckinghamshire, Eng. teu. 'I. iBy iiail) This small Knglish village where John Milton wrote L Allegro II fenseroso, a portion oi .Paradise Lost and other poems, has a proud war record. Practically every, man eligible for tho war duty out of Horton's 700 popula tion is in khaki. Some of them have been killed. The women, children and old men are carry ing on the village's chief oc cupation, market gardening as usual. Milton left Horton , in 1638, a year after the death of his mother. Her. body lies under the southern aisle of the Pansh ' church. The spot is marked by a flat blue stone which distinctly bears the date April 1637." .: 4 41 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 LAD TOO BIG FOR MARINES Honey. Honey has been known from tho ear liest times. Tho Scriptures make men tion of It "nd pagan writers celebrated its virtues. It was called "the mlllt nf I the aged" and wan thought to prolong lire. Honey was also used In the em balming of the body after death.. Apnllcuttt, 6 Feet 5 Inches Tall, I ' Woicrha 9K7 PnnnHd ' . I Pittsburg, Feb. 4. Michael Tuhol ski, a steel mill puddler from Clevelan was rejected at the United States Mar ine Corps recruiting station in this city as "too big and husky" for the marine corps. He is 22 years old. Tuholski measured six-feet and.iive inches in his stocking feet and weigh ed 257 pounds without clothing. The medical examiner pronounced him a perfect physical speciman, but the maximum height for marines is 73 in ches, and no giants or pygmies are Wanted in the Marine Corps. The giant, who says he is no white 'hope and has no desire to meet Jess Willard or Frank Moran, will resume puddling in the mills. j , - Ilea. Trmlo .Murk, U. 8. Pot. omce. The one perfect front-lacs corset with that exclusive VENTILO'back, and VENTILO front shield. A model for every possible figure and a price for every purse. $2.00 and up. Other models at $2.00 up. J Residence 1702 Oak . Phone Red 3221 ' Your Eyes Their Care When Normal Yes PROTECT ENLIGHTEN ENTERTAIN You watch this space and from time to time we will give you information on the proper care of your eyes not generally known. We have absolutely the only plant in Eastern Oreon that grinds and polishes the sufrace of a lonse. We have the most up-to-cut fitting parlors and manufactur ing departments in Eastern Oregon. Call and examine our plant and compare with others. The firm that tries to deceive you with fictitous advertisement is unreliable, beware of them. J. H.PEARE.& SON. La Grande's Leading Optemet-risU. We Have On Hand a Full Line, of Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Oranges Cauliflower , Lemons , .. Lettuce : Grapefruit '; ' ""Cabbage Bananas Parsnips '. , Apples Beets Cocoanuts Turnips Cranberries Carrots Celery . ' ; Sweet Potatoes ' Fresh Eggs 45c doz : 1 Quart .. 3 Quarts SPECIAL FRESH CRANBERRIES PHONE YOUR ORDERS PROMPT DELIVERIES .,10c :25c HARRIS GROCERY PHONE MAIN 70 FARMERS PHONE B 192 408 North Fir Street, Cross Track Feed and Hay We have a full line of feed in stock. Good Baled Hay and all kinds of grain. Prices right and prompt delivery any time, anywhere. Wholesale and reail. Will trade feed for good Wood. . Fuel HIAWATHA and ROCK SPRINGS COAL, well SCREENED and CLEAN. FIR, PINE and TAMARACK WOOD, 4 foot or sawed STORAGE of all kinds, FIREPROOF Building. DRAYAGE, TRANSFER and DELIVERY, FURNI TURE and PIANO MOVING. EVERYTHING GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY. - LYNCH and STEWART Jefferson Ave. One Block East of Depot. Phone Main 10 Residence Phone Red 1091 The New York Store Is The Wlorkingmaris Friend LOW PRICES NOW Men's suits ....$5.00 to $10.00 Men's hats and caps 85c, $1.50, $2.00 Men's shoes and rubbers ....75c, $1.35, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 Men's work shirts ' .40c Men's1 work shirts, wool .$1.25, to $1.45 Men's heavy underwear 39c Union suits 95c to $1.75 Cotton glaves and sox and handkerchiefs 5c, 10c, 15c Cotton gloves and sox wool .20c 25c Overalls, Union ? 50c, 75c, 85c, $1.00 . Suit cases, trunks and bags $1.25, $1.50, $2.00, $3.00 We buy and sell all kinds of jewelry. We keep open until 9 p. m. 214 Depot street, La Grande, Oregon WE BUY ALL KINDS OF RAW FURS IN TRADE. THERE ARE MANY REASONS WHY EVERY HOME IN LA GRANDE SHOULD HAVE ELECTRIC LIGHT. Eastern Oregon Light & Power Co. Always at Your Service Telephone Main43 Try Our Want Ad Column