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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1917)
TUESDAY, JANUARY 1G, 3917. LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER PACLE T 111 EC We Can Satisfy Your Taste on Cocoa and Chocalate Baker's Cocoa Stolhverck Cocoa K unlc'el's Cocoa Hershev's Cocoa Save 10c per pound by using Triumph Coffee, per' pound Extra Good Cranberries, 15c quail 1 1-2 Pound Pail Mince Meat 20c Grape Fruit, 3 for 25c Medium Sized Oranges, 2G for 50c. Large Sized Oranges, 20 for 50c. Fancy Jonathan Apples .$1.00. Oregon Co-Operative Association 1118 1-2 Adams Ave. La Grande, Ore. Branches at IMBLER, OR. EVANS, OR. mj.n!aj!i..ij)M:iam Our Want Ads get replies. Professional i at .$ $ of. i$. .$ FRATERNAL ORDERS i. F. & A.M. La Grande l odge No. 41, A. F. & A. M. holds regulnr meetings fi.st and third Saturday e t 7:30 p. m. Cordial welcome to all Masons. L. B. MOE, W. M. ' A. C. WILLIAMS, Sec. B. P. O. E. ELKS, La Gran::e Lodge No. 433. Lodge meets each Thurs day evening at eight o' clock. Home and club privileges cheerfully ex tended to all Brother Elks. FRANK C. BRAMWELL, Exalted Ruler. ADNA B. ROGERS. Secretary. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Red Cross Lodge No. 27 meet every Monday night in Castle HU1 (K. of P. Hall.) A Pythian welcome to all visiting Knights. 'W. D. M'CARTHY, C. C. DELILE GREEN K. of R. & S. MODERN WOODMEN OF AMER ICA La Grande Camp No. 7703 meets on the first and third Thurs day evenings of each month 'n the K. of P. Hall. Visiting neighbors welcome. H. W. E. DIXON, V. C. 5 45IIM4M I Clerk, (Y. M. C. A.) "WOODMEN OF THE WORLD La Grande Camp No. 169 meets every first and third Friday ct K. of P. Hall. All visiting neighbors wel comed. ROBERT M'LANE, C. C. E. W. EASTMAN. CLERK. Zi. O. O. M. La Grande Lodire Nr. 850 Loyal Order Of Moose holds regular meeting every Wednesday night.and 8 p. m. in Eagle Hall.fifh floor Foley building on Adams Ave, Visitors always welcome. Dues pay able at Youn's Sweets. GEO. YOUNG, Die. HARRY SWART. Sec. O. E. S. Hope Chapter No. 1 . S. holds stated communiestions the second and fourth Wednesday of each month. Visiting members cor diallv welcomed. . EMMA L. KIDDLK. W. M. MARY A. WARNICK, Sec. RYAL NEIGHBORS. Iris Camp meets every second FrMav after noon and every fourth Friday eve ning, every month in K. of P. Hall. All visiting members cordiallv wnl comed MTVNIE BUNTING. Oracle. NELLIE V. VINACKE, Recorder. REBEKAHS Ci ystal Lodge No. 60. Meets every Tuesday evening in the I. O. O. F. Hall. All visiting mem bers are Invited to attend. ADLA CHTLDERS, N. O. . ROSA CLASS, Sec. E. A L. OF SECURITY. Mt. Era- (Wifirardelli's Cocoa Baker's Sweet Choco late Ohirardelli's Chocolate fiuittartl's Chocolate I Condon Man Purchases Apartments, j J. C. Lynch of Condon has pur chased the Dr. Darland apartmerts , and has taken possession. The Der I land building is a type of ln nw.t ' modern apartment house. I Complaints, affidavits and leeal ; blanks of every description for sale at The Observer, 1710 Sixth street. Directory lly Conned No. 2C46. Meets second and fourth Thursday evening at i o'clock at hagle Hall. Visiting mem bers are we' omed. C. E. STITT, Pres. C. W. COOK, Fin. See. VIOLA L. HCGUE, Rec. Sec. DENTIST E. P. MOSSMAN Dentist; rooms 7, 8 and 9, Sommer building. Phone Main 717; office hours 8 to 12 a. m. and 1 to 5 p. ni. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS. DK. J. L. sician. INGLE Osteopathic phy. DR. MARGARET INGLE Osteo pathic physician. Diseases of wom en and children. 1 Third floor New Foley Bldfr. Hours 10-12 a. m.; 2-5 and 7-8 p m., and by appointment. Office phone, Red 1761; residence Red 881. VETERINARY DP, H. W. RILEY Granduate Veter inarian Hospital. 1409 Madison Ave. State Stallion Inspector and Inspec tor of stock for shipment. Home In dependent Phone, Black 41. Farmeri Co-operative Phone, Main 112. ATTORNEYS CRAWFORD & EAKIN T. H Crawford and Robert S. Etkin, Att orneys at law. Practice in all the courts of the state and the United States, Office, Wast Jacobson build ing, rooms 9-10-17. La Grande Ore- gon. COCHRAN & FBERHARD. Geo. T, Cochran and Coloa R. FAierhard Attorneys. La Grande National Hank Building, E. W. EASTMAN Lawyer- Offic Rooms 1 and 3, La Grande National Bank Building. R. J. GREEN Attorney at Law.. Rooms 14-15, Paltr.er-Rocsch Bldg.. La Grande, Ore. Practices in all State and Federal courts. ALBERT SMALL Attorney at Law. Rooms 26-27, La Grande National Bank Building. Practices in all state and Tederal courts. Phon Main 11. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER H. E. ROSKAMP. Contractor and builder, La Grande, Ore., Phone Red 1981. ARCHITECTS. C. B. MILLER Architect, Room New Foley Building. 28, Sell HThe Observer want ads will sell it. OAIRY LORE. An uucleuu calf pen, poor veil Ulutlou and lack of sunlight are serious liaudlcapg. Wash water used In tho churu should bo approximately the Baino temperature as the buttor mllk or wltlilu 2 degrees of it. Well bred calves will return good money for the sklmmllk they consume. Alfalfa Is the richest protein roughage that can be fed, and if a cow can have all the good third or fourth cutting alfalfa she will cat a grain ration of eight to ten liounds of corn dally will balance the ration. Cow testing associations should command the interest of every dairyman, for they help to make more money for the man who milks. ADVANTAGES OF COWS FRESHENING IN FALL Years ago we had our cows calve In April, and consequently tho bulk of out butter was made during the summer months of June. July and August and had to be packed lu tubs, or flrklns, and held until October before sending to market, writes J. W. Iugtinra in Hoard's Dairyman. When tho tasto of customers had undergone a change and demanded freshly made butter It be came necessary and protltable to sup ply them Willi the kind they wanted. Then we managed to huve our cows freshen in September and October, so as to obtain tho higher prices for dnirv products which ruled during the whiter mouths. While the pusturnge was good the cows did not need any grain feed, but bh soon us the grass became short and frosted we supplemented It with green fodder com and when this was gone with well preserved cornstalks and clo ver hay, together with wheat bran, buckwheat bran, middlings and com ment. To prevent shrinkage when taken from pasture und placed ou dry feed we provided a supply of pumpkins, culling apples, small potatoes, beets, loose headed cabbage and the sound, outside leaves of cabbage that hud been sold or buried. These things ft '"Www XV s - ' V 1 ? vS- This hnmlroine pure In oil Jersey cifw wan tho fcratul i-hurnplon cow at tlie national dairy ghuvr, hold rntly nt SpritiKiiehl, .VI.ikh. tier name is Gloria HcModltrttno, ami she is owned hy A. V. Llarnt-H, New Cunaun. Conn. were stored In the basement of the ham where they would not freeze mid were fed to the cows in addition to their rations of fodder and grain. There was nutriment in lhe.se articles, but their feeding value was not alto gether dependent on that. To the cows they were an agreeable "dessert." an enjoyable relish delightful to the taste and easily digested. When the cows freshen lu the fall the greater share of milking, ehurulng or shipping milk or feeding calves comes at the .seasiin4when business on the farm Is n;t hurried ami when the farmer and his family have the must time to attend to these duties. An other tiling, cows that calve in the fall are genera My In good flesh, with nn abundance of strength to hear the de mands of maternity nad the drain on their strength to which good milkers are subjected. Cows that calve In the spring are more apt to be thin and weak from the lack of proper food and exercise and nre not so likely to du well In calving more likely to retain the pluoenta. The disadvantage of fall freshening consists In hnvlnj; to feed more brim and meal to miike the cows do well and keep up the flow of milk until grnsB comes. This higher grain feed ing makes dairy products cost more In winter, but the higher prices of the winter market more than pay the addi tional expense for grain feed. When more grain u fed the umoure Is richer, and the cows should have credit for its Increased value. When more grain te fed lews fodder or slluge Is con sumed. An experiment In Utah showed that cows freshened In the fall make a profit of $!).4;i n year more than cows that freshened in the spring. Breeding Heifers. Yltcro hi always the temiKiition to breed bclfers young, this coming from the desire on the purt of the beginner to get a herd as quickly as possible. Heifers that have not been pushed from the start cannot safely bo bred as young as can the big lusty ones that were fed plenty of milk during their first six or eight months of life with liberal allowances of such growth pro ductng feeds as ulfalfa, bran and onts as they grow older. Balance the Ration. Good rations for any class of live stork must be well balanced as to va fiery and palntabllity, succulence and nutrition. No tuo animals will re spond the same. Don't Forgejt the Number- MAMMOTH GROCERY The Middle Store in the Middle of the Middle Block 1211 Adams Avenue. , FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES DAILY HOME-MADE KROUT, TILLAMOOK CHEESE, FANCY CODFISH HOW TO GET A LOAN UNDER THE NEW FARM LOAN ACT (Continued From Page One) with additional blanks incldin? an application for a charter and blanks for the loan committee to use in tho work of appraising the farms. As soon, as the loan committee is elected it may proceed to appraise the farms upon which mortgages are to be placed. Its report, which must be unanimous, must accompany the sign-, ed articles of associations and 'be filed with the Federal Ijind bank of that district. When this is done the appraiser of the Federal Land bank will come to inspect the security offered and ac cept or reject tho report of the loan committee. No one farmer may borrow more than $10,000 'nor loss thnn $100. No National Farm Loan association may start with aggregate loans less than $-'0,000. If John Smith, a farmer, desires to borrow $2000 he invests in the stock of his local loan association one-twentieth of this nmount, or $100. His association then invests this money in the stock of the Federal Iiand bank, enabling it thus to in crease its capital so as to make an other loan of $2000 to some other farmer. Tho borrower gets his in vestment back when he pays off his loan, or he may turn it in as the last i payment on his loan. ' ..Farmers nre required to form these1 organizations so that they eventually j will control the Federal Land banks. ' Each loan association votes in the election of the directors of its Federal Land bank. Each association has a loan committee which values the land of its memlwrs subject to tho approval of the land bank appraiser and the Federal Land bank. Each association has a board of directors which has the power to exclude or admit now mem bers by a two-third's vote. It is through this local loan association that the farmer invests the money to be used for increasing the capital stock of the Federal Land banks, and this is how the farmer comes into pos session of his own banking system. Farmers are permitted to borrow up to HO per cent of the appraised value of their land and 20 per cent of the appraised value of the permanent insured improvements thereon. It is not necessary for a borrower to be an actual land owner when he joins, but tho landless man must use borrowed money to purchase land which he intends to immediately be gin farming. Another chapter will be devoted to this feature. Editor's Note: Tomojjow's install ment will explain how loans under the farm loan act nre gradually retired. Corns Peel Right Off With "Gets-iS" 2 Drops, and the Corn is a "Goner!" When you've Kt to walk on tho Hides of your shoo to Kt away from those awful corn-pains, there's only ono coimnou-scnso tiling to do. I"' "(ict-Hi" Yiiur f'ornx Won't HI In V nter. llrxlileH. They'll Shrivel, l.tMa and I'erl on! Tut 2 or 9 drops of "(Jets-H" on the corn riKht away. I'aln and Inilam niatlon will disappear, tho eorn will bnifln to Bhrivcl from that instant then It loosens nnd falls rlht off. There's no otliar corn-reniovfir in the world that acts llkn tints-It." No new discovery lias been made in oorn-rcmovcrs since "(lets-It" was born. Don't fori;et that fact, 'dels It' loes away forever wit li the uho of Halves that Irritate, bandaKes that make a bundle of your toe, plasters that half do tho work, knives nnd sclnaora that draw blood t!n "Gcts It" no more illirirlnif or cuttlnir. "Oote-It" 19 oolrt overywliuro. too a bottle, or cnt on rroolpt of prloe by K. Utwrenoe ft Co., ChlraiKo, 111. ruiiNAM'S UHUU STORE THE REX ALL STORE ninm i u I'ii'iii i 'ilil'i itadma Main 82 II We are doing our best to give you first quality work in our 3 specialized de partments. LAUNDRY DRY CLEANING CARPET RENOVATING STANDARD LAUNDRY,, COMPANY La Grande, Ore. ' Geo. Gilbert, Mgr. In i I . GEO. PALMER LUMBER COM PAN Yf Retail Dept. Phone Main 8 a m Bel. Trtd Mm, U. B. Pit. Offloe. is greater value than any other corset, dollar for dollar, in charm of style, in perfect fit und beautiful finish. Besides all this it is the only front lace corset with the wonderful exclusive feature, the Ventilo BACK When in need of a new corset have a trial fitting in a La Cnmille. You will be convinced of its supremacy. Tho differ ent models alwnvs on hand. Triced at $2.00 Up Kleven years experience in fit ting Front-Lace Corsets. MRS. ROUT. PATTISON Corsetiere Phone Red 8221 Res. 1700 Oak QU'.CK DELIVERIES are a feature of this lumber bus-' iness. When yon give us an or der you can confidently rely on getting your lumbor little be fore you need it. Tht means no delay i' construction, no waiting time that you have to pay for. Think tint over. ' ' vafwrmwmBBmmmm Drs. Darland, over Putman's. Adv.1 Your Money and Your Temper We grind our own leases Broken lenses duplica ted the same Faetorr oh Premises J. H. PEARE&S0N