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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1916)
TAGE SIX) LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER THURSDAY; -APRIL 13, 101G. 11 i i $ I s .: f i !! il 3 Professional FRATERNAL ORDERS j -A. K. & A.M. La Grnnde Lodge No.' l, A. I'. & A. M. holda regular toioetmgs first and third Saturday it 7:30 p. m. Cordinl welcome to all Masons. ROBERT S. EAKIN, W. M. A. (J. WILLIAMS, Sec. B. P. O. E. La Grande Lodge No 433 .Meets each Thursday evening at 8 .'clock in Elks club, corner of De- vpot street and Washington avenue. Visiting brothers cordially invited o attend. M. B. DONOHUE, E. R. ADNA B. ROGERS, Sec ;KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Red Cross -Lodge No. 27 meet every Monday night in Castle hall (K. of r. hall.) .A Pythian welcome to all visitng . i Anights. DELILE GREEN, C. C. GEO. HUNTINGTON CURREY K. of R. & S -MODERN WOODMEN1 OF AMER ICA La Grande Camp No. 7703 ' meets on the first and third Thurs day evenings of each month in the K, of P. hall. Visiting neighbors -welcome. H. E. DIXON, V. C. CHAS. JESTER, Clerk. WOODMEN OF THE WORLD La Grande Camp No. 169 meets every first and third Fridny at K. of P. Hall. All visiting neighbors wel comed. O. L M'DOWELL, C. C. E. W. EASTMAN, Clerk. L. 0. O. M. La Grande Lodg No. 850 Loyal Order Of Moose holds regular meeting every Tuesday night at 7:30 in Moose Home on Adams Ave. Visitors always wel come. - ANGUS STEWART, Die. HARRY SWART. Sec. PO. E. -La Grande Aerie No. 259 on-each and every Friday evening at-8 o'clock on top floor of new Foley building. Visit.ng members cordially welcomed. J. P. RUSK, W. P. L. F. BELLINGER. Sec. O. E. S. Hope Chapter No. 13, O. . S. holds stated communications the second and fourth Wednesday of each ' month. Visiting members cordially invited. EMMA L. KIDDLE, W. M. MARY A. WARNICK, Sec. -ftOYAL NEIGHBORS. Iris Camp : -meets every second Friday After noon and fourth Friday evening. vey month in K. of P. Hall. All visiting members cordially invited. MINNIE BUNTING, Oracle. LILY C. KIMMEL, Recorder. REBEKAHS Crystal Lodge No. 5?. Meets evory Tuesday evening in the I. O. O. F. Hall. All visiting mem bers are invited to attend. VESTA SHAW, N. G. ANNA ALEXANDER, Tec. K. & L. OF SECURITY. Mt Emily Council No. 2C46. Metts second and fourth Wednesday evening at 8 o'- clock at Moose Hall. Visitirg mem bers are welcome. C. E. STITT, Pres. BERTHA K YFRS, Fin. Sec. VIOLA L. HOG UK, Roc. Sec. 'WOMEN OF WOODCRAFT CIRCLE NO. 47 Meet first and third Wednesday evenings of each month at the Moose Hall. All vis;tir? neighbors welcome. LILLIE ALl.STOTV, G. N. LOUISE HILARY. Clerk. .PYTHIAN SISTERS of Rowena Tsm ple No. 9 meets every second and fourth Friday evening at K. P. Hall. "MRS. LIZZIE HAYWORTH, M. E. C. LOUISE LANDRI" M. of R. C. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. . DR. R. E. L. HOLT Physician and .Burgeon; corner Ad, 11113 -(venue and .'Depot street. Phonas Office Main 68; Residence Mnin 730. Hours 11 to 12 a. m.; 2 to 5 p.m.; 7 to 8 p. in. t DR. H. L. UNDERWOOD Physician aad surgeon. Diseases of the eye a specialty. BR. DORA J. UNTICRWOOD Dis eases of women and children. Of fices Adams pvenue over Red Cross Drug Store. .EYE. EAR, NOSE, THROAT SPEC IALIST DR. H. M. BOUVY Practice limited exclusively to diseases and surgery cf Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat and ihe Fitting of Glasses. Office West Jacobson Bldg. v Offije phono Red S431. Residence. Red 2021. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS DR. J. L. INGLE Osteopathic phy sician. DR. MARGRET INGLE DUease; of women: care and feeding of chil dren. Office Room 37, new Foley Bldg. Office hours 10-12 a. m.; 2-5 b. m.. and bv appointment. Office jpkone Red 1761; residence Red 881. CHIROPRACTORS DRS. DARLAND Chiropractic par lors 4th and Depot street. Phone Red 1751. VETERINARY CR. H. W. RILEY Graduate Veter bnrmn Hospital. 1409 Madison Av. Stat Stailtan. Inspector and Inspec- Dittectoity tor of Stock for shipment. Home In- dependent Phon Black 41. For.iiers Co-operative Phone, Main 112 DENTIST E. P, Mossmnn Dentist: rooms 6 i and 7 new Wost Building. Phone Black 1521; Oilice hours 8, to 12 p. m. and 1 to 5 p. m. ATTORNEYS CRAWFORD & SAK1N. T. H. Crawford and Robert S. Eakin, Att orneys at law. Practice in all the courts aof the state and United Sttaes. Office, West Jacobson build ing, rooms 9-10-17, Le Grande Ore gon. COCHRAN. & EBERHARD Geo.T. Cochran and Colon R. Eberhard Attorneys. La Grande National Bank Bldg. La- Grande, Ore, R. J. GREEN. Attorney at law Rooms 14-15, Palmer-Roosch Bldg., La Grande Ore. Practices in all state and Federal courts. E. W. EASTMAN Lawyer Office Rooms 1 and 3, La Grande National Bank Building. ALBERT SMALL Attorney at Law. Rooms 2b, 27 La Grande National Bunk Building. Practices in all state and federal courts. Phone Main 11. UNDERTAKERS J. C. HENRY Undertaker and Em balming; 20 years in business. Day phone, Main 62; night phones, Red 3131. Red 562, Black 3811. AUCTIONEER ED STRINGHAM, the Reliable Sales- man. Farm and Stock Sales a spec ialty.' Satisfajtio l guaranteed. Clerk books furnished free. R. F. D. No. 2. Phone Farm 1x0. , CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER H. E. Rosknmp, Contractor and build er. La Grande Ore., Phone Red 1981, CIVIL ENGINEER ct.-f pi,. Mn 5H ' ARCHITECT MILTON S. BLOCK Architect. Sketches and estimates cheerfully furnished. Office, Room" 26, Now Foley Building. Difficult A London man just liack from the States says that a little gill on the train to Pittsburg was chewing gum. Not only that but she insisted on pul ling it out) in strings and letting it fall back into her mouth gain. "Mabel!" said her mother in a horri fied whisper. "Mabel, don't do that. Chew your gum like u little lady. ' London Opinion. 13 ODIRT (9ORSETS ! Front Laced 1 HAVE YOUR EASTER SUIT Oil GOWN KITTED OVER A MODART CORSET DISCR1M INATIXG women Women who know the modes- Always seek these advantages in a corset. They seek symmetry and grace ful figure beauty to make the gown attractive They seek the smooth back made possible by the absence of laces in the back of the front lnced MOD.YUT. They seek ease of carriage comfort They seek e-ise in adjustment. 1 hev seek freedom over the dia phragm They seek these advantages combined with the modern notes of fashion And they find complete expres sion of these ideas in MODART Corsets. Lit vour next corset be 11 MO DART and select it by fitting room proof. i Pauline Lederle i Sommer Hotel Bldg. SPORT NEWS . . Maker, April l.'t. Organization of an Elks ball team, wjs authorized last night at the meeting of Baker lodge No. 338, B. P. O. E. and Louis rcinuld, at one time a director ot tne destinies of the Baker club in the Tri State league, was uppointcd organizer. Pendleton, April 12. Lester Hurst set up a record for a prize catA Sunday that will give the anglers of the county something to cast for all season. With a five ounce rod and a No. 5 hook he landed a 2( inch rain bow trout in McKay creek and it weighed between six and seven pounds. Many anglers were out in all di rections Sunday but few report any degree of luck. The .water is yet too high and too murky for good sport. they report. .The Im Grande high school track team will hold its annual Medley race next Saturday, intended to further test out the powers of the squad. GKAINMEN OPPOSED. Umatilla Association Drafts Measure Against Road Bonds. Pendleton, April 13. At a meeting of the Inland Grain Growers' associa tion held here Saturday, the following resolution was passed by the -directors, and the president instructed to give copies cf the resolution to the press with request that the same be published Resolved, That we, the directors of the Inland Grain Growers' association of Umatilla county, respectfully and urgently protest against the proposed $980,000 road -bond issue, and urgent ly recommend Tne millage tax for the creation of a special road fund for the permanent improvement of the highways. This association endorses the plan of the more permanent improvement of the roads, and believes the plan of constructing the improved roads lead ing from the wheat belt to the mark et centers', is the better plan; that the tunus derived from the proposed bond issue, if used in conformity to the plan outlined, would in tlv greater part be used in the hard surfacing of a Tew miles ot roads paralleling the railroads, and would be used prin cipally for pleasure purposes. mis organization being a farmer's (farmers to register, and to see that the full vote of the farming commun ity conies out at the primaries and voles against the bond issue. We warn the voters notto neglect to vote upon this question at the pri mary election. The vote there is finni and conclusive. The measure will not go on the ballot again at the general election. Dated April 8, 1916. Signed: C. A. BARRETT, Pres. HENRY TAYLOR, V.-Pres. J. O. HALES, Sec. Explorer And Bride On Honeymoon Yokahoma, April 10. Roy C. And rews and his bride arrived here today from New York and San Francisco on the steamer Teriyo Maru, equipe.1 and ready to start on their iong honey moon and tiger hunt through ttlhe remote wilds of Western China. Little Mrs. Andrews probably is the first white givl to go into such a land, 011 such u mission, for her honeymoon. Andrews is in charge of the Ameri can Musoum of NaJtural (History's Asiatic zoological expedition; and he and his bride are to bring back with them tigers, leopards, eleuhants, spec imens of the rare "Snow Leopard" and "huge, Maltese Brown Man-eating' Tiger," together with many oth er wild beasts of'the Chinese jungles and mountains. Mrs. Andrews is the photographer of the expidition. She carries a new motion picture camera, invented by Car Akoly. African explorer and ele phant stalker. She also will take col or pictures of animals in the moun tains of China. "We will go right into the field of tiger hunting upon our arrival in China," said Mrs. Andrews, "and if we are fortunate we will send some fine specimens of the man-eating tig- Jt to the Museum.. If our hopes are 1 1 fulfilled the members of our party will begin to look for big game about the second week in May. Our sched ule evils for a vear of actual work in the field." At Pekin the expedition will obtnin letters on the Viceroys of the dif ferent provinces in China. Around! Fooehow, a large city on the '-oast between Shanghai and Hong Kong, the tiger hunting will begin, for it is i" this region the tiger abounds. "From Pekin," said Andrews, "we will sii'l down the const to Foo.-hau, in Fu-Kein through the Bohen moun tains, some "00 miles inland from the Strait of Formosa. There is b'r mmc in this region and we should obtain -nlunhle and new specimens. "From Fu-Kein my wife. Heller ands I will go up the coast to the mouth of the great Yancsto to Tur"r ting Ijike. Here we will follow anoth er stream by f 'liont as far as we can p-et toward W-Chau Province. "This province is ' of the wildest imd the most difficult to enter in China. The-o pre no rtvads and few in hnbiti'rts. The eomitrv is mountain ous .ind rugged. This will be the main field for our work on tis trip, 'hoinrh we nrobnblv will mish on into the province of Yunnan, unless the revl ),.. hn recently broken out Hv-re makes jt tn dangerous. We may fvi "n i"to Tibet, "All this country is semi-tropical: cold in the mountainous regions and I uii rt.sia proujioiy iormea ine oinn ' 1 -v. of the hu"inn race." ' I Few worrivi hevc ever undertaken ANNOUNCEMENT Introducing Mr. C. Frizzell, Expert Electrical Worker- Realising Jor fjbme time that La Grande aitfl Vicinity should have a first-class electrical worker I have been endeavoring for several months to locate such a man. All garages in Country-Towns have men who work on electrical equipment, but to get a graduate from the 'inside stops of the Splitdorf Electric Company is no -small undertaking as I have just learned. But I succeeded in getting Mr. Frizzell, and have letters from the- Splitdorf Electric Company and other successful concerns attesting to his ability as an electrical worker so that I can now say to my trade that I can guarantee proper workmanship on the electrical end of the auto mobiles.' ' Very few Garages in the country can make such a claim, but I stand behind and guarantee all of Mr. Frizzell's work. He is expert on Mag netos, Generators, Starters, Storage Batteries. Come to us with your electrical work. - ' LEIGHTON'S GARAGE R. W. Leigh ton, Proprietor. a jouney so xepensive and so hezard ous as this. Mrs. Andrews has in herited an adventurous disposition. She is the daughter of Major Henry Borup, U. S. A and the sister of the young Arctic explorer, George Borup, who was drowned in Peary's Polar ex pedition. Though Roy C. Andrews is still young, he has gained a reputa tion as a naturalist' and has twice encircled the world.. His companion, Edmund Heller, besides his trip with the Roosevelt African expedition, has been with one of Paul Rainey's ex peditions and has just returned from A Little Bird Told Me that I'd never be smoke-wise until I got wise to "Tux." .And now life is just one joyous pipe-dream! For "Tux" is packed so full of smiles and brightness that every luscious, long-drawn puff makes a fellow happy as a iarK ar. sun-up. est, CARUSO World Fftmmis Tenor says; Tuxcdo completely satisfies my tobacco taste. It is mild and has a delicious, flavor. Most important of all, from a singer 's standpoint, Tuxedo does not ir ritate my thrvat. " YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE Convenient, glamine wrapped, JJ moisture-proof pouch . . . " Tin llumijtrt, 40c an.! .YV T 11 K AM .11CM the Yale Peruvian expedition. "Animal life in Central Asia is of greatest interest to the scientist," Andrews added. "Most of the larger animals of the North American con tinent have their nncesters there. The mountain sheep of the Rockies, the elk the moose and the buffalo migrated northward and crossed Boring Strait in the days when the strait was dry land." At least, we have Villa to thank for his promotion of the preparedness campaig New York Tribune. The Perfect Tobacco There are three reasons for tiie brisk, bracing, hustling vigor you get out of Tuxedo (1) Choicest leaf; (2) Slow, perfect ageing; (3) "Tuxedo Process." And it's the last that brings out the best that's in the other two I s For it's the "Tuxedo Process" that removes the final trace of harshness from the leaf and wholesomest tobacco in the world. Millions of dollars have been spent in vain attempts to imitate the "Tuxedo Process. " But not one of the imitations has ever approached much less equalled the "Tuxedo Process," which was discovered by a doctor. Tuxedo never bites your tongue, irritates your throat, or bothers your nerves as a week's trial will prove to you. Famous green tin with gold 1 f lettering, curved to fit pock et X UV In Glass Humidors, 50c a it J 90c TOBACCO COMPANY APPENDICITIS CAN PREVENTED La Grande people should know that a few doses of simple buck thorn bark, glycerine, etc, as mixed in Ad-ler-i-ka, often relieve or prevent appendicitis. This simple mixture re moves such surprising foul matter that one spoonful relieves almont any case of constipation, sour stom ach or gas. A short treatment helps chronic stomach trouble. Adler-i-ka has easiest and most thorough action of anything we ever sold. Putman Drug Store. for Pipe and Cigarette makes Tuxedo the mild HOW BE 4