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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1917)
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY A 1917. L3I GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER PAGE TtClEE TAGIN AND BILL SIKES The Artcraft Pictures Corporation - PRESENTS - i America's Sweetheart '4 '4 SCENE FROM "OLIVER TWIST," A PARAMOUNT PICTURE PRODUCEO BY LASKY. Tbla la Fagln and Bill Slkes tha arch-flanda In the beloved tale of Olivet ffwlat. In the Laaky adaptation of the atory for the Paramount Program, Ma rt Doro la Oliver, with Tully Marshall and Hobart Bosworth as Fagln and Slice, reipectlvely, Grain Growers Plan Portland Meetings Oregon. graingrowers, shippers, millers and othai-s interested in grain standards are being urged to attend a hearing to be held in Portland to morrow and Thursday before repre sentatives of the department of agri culture. Portland is the official headquar ters of district No. 32, created under provisions of the United States grain standards acts, and as it is regarded of special importance to the grain trade, it is understood that Seattle is making efforts to induce the govern ment to remove the headquareers to the Puget Sound port. The district in cludes Alaska, a large part of Califor nia, Hawaii, part of Montana, a large part of Idaho, all of Oregon and Washington and a small section of Nevada. Portland business interests are anx ious to make as big a showing as pos sible at the hearing and all persons interested in the subject are asked to attend. The hearing. will be held to gather information on which the secretary of agriculture later will base official grain standards authorized at the last session of congress. Suggestions from graingrowers, dealers and millers will be invited and will be given considera tion by the department before the standards are finally established. To Give Valentine Party at Y. M. C. A. Affair Is Under Direction of Com mittee of Public School Teachers and Association Social Committee. Cupids and hearts will hold sway at the Y. M. C. A. Wednesday night at a Valentine party to be given under the direction of a joint committee of pub lic school teachers and the Y. M. C. A. , social committee. Though the full ; program will be divulged tomorrow ! the committee has said there will be a ."post office" with Secretary King in charge; an archery contest for single 1 people, only, and plenty of refresh i ments. An admission charge of ten cents will be made and the ticket given for the dime will entitle holder to every thing and as much "refreshments" as 1 he wishes. La Grand High School Wins Game Save The Babies These are authentic quotations f mm the booklet on babies by l'v. L. E.r mett Holt of Columbia unive:?ity and Dr. Henry L. K. Shaw of Union uni versity. There should be a warm, soft blan ket to receive the new born baby. The body should be oiled, not bathed. The eyes should 'be carefully cleansed with a saturated solution of boric acid and into, each eye the doctor or nurse should put two or three drops of 2 per cent solution of nitrate of silver to prevent sore eyes and possibly blinn ness. He should be placed in a quiet, darkened room, properly protected against the cold, but not surrounded with too many hot Water bajjs or bottles. baker School Team Defeated Satur day Night, 24 to 21. Baker, Ore., Feb. 13. (Special.) The La Grande high school basket ball team won a victory over the Ba ker high school in the basketball game at the Y. M. C. A. Saturday by the score of 24 to 21, which was by no means as bad a defeat as some had predicted for the newly-organized Ba ker team. It was a close game all the way, the first half ending with the score tied at 13 all. In the second half the visitors, by virtue of their exper ience and better developed team play, drew ahead gradually, but the locals nevdr quit fighting until the game ended and on numerous occasions came up to wtihin a point or two of ticing the score. The teams lined up as follows: ' iBaker Burchtorf and Baker, fort wards; Brown, center; Coffman and Poulson, guards. La Grande Reynolds and Lyman, forwards; McDonald, center; Larson and Ash, guards. Summary Substitutes for Baker, Fleetwood for Baker, Jasper for Burchtorf, Lubbus for Brown. For Ia Grande, Rosenbaum for Lyman. Time of halves, 20 minutes. Referee, Shaw. DIAMOND BRIQUET Diamond Briquets aro made from the purest, richest portions of coal veins that have made the Pacific Coast Coal Company famous. The coal is ground fine, dried thoroughly and then mixed with the purest of asphalt asphalt with all the light, smelly oils burned off. This rich, soft mass then goes through massive presses that give it the tremendous pressure of almost 5000 pounds to the square inch. It emerges in briquets of cylindrical shape with rounded ends, each weighing 10 1-2 ounces, and each stamped with a diamond. Diamond Briquets have a heating value of 13,432 British Ther mal Units to the pound and extended tests prove them conclusively to be fully 10 per cent better than the best house coal now on the mar ket, with only eight and a fraction per cent ash. What the United States Bureau of Mines Says About Briquets 1. The even size of Briquets permits a more regular and thor ough combustion in the firebox or furnace. 2. Briquets produce much less smoke and in many cases prac tically no smoke. 3. They "retain their shape in the fire and do not coke suffici ently to cut off the needed supply of air. 4. They burn to a fine ash without clinkering. Clinkers can be formed if all the absolute ash is not removed frem the grates regu larly. 5. A Briquet fire requires much less care than one of raw fuel. Suggestions for Getting Best Results from DIAMOND BRIQUETS Clean out firebox thoroughly when you commence using Briiuets. Use more kindling than used for lump coal. This will also aid in keeping chimney clean. Give the fire full draft until well started. This burns the smoke and while making more heat also prevents soot. Check the draft after fire is well started; very little draft is needed then, and fuel consumption will be reduced. When adding more Briquets increase the chimney draft while stove or furnace is open. This will prevent smole from escaping into the room. A gentle shaking will clean the grates. Sr If you have a strong draft carry some Briqueti ashes on the grates to help regulate the fire. Briquet ashes are light and porus and the draft can work through. For banking or to hold over night, cut off all drafts completely after applying the Briquets. If you wish to bank fires every night, you will get the ocrt results by carrying a deep fire, leaving ashes on the grate. THE J. D. LYNCH COMPANY One Block East of Depot Phone Main 10 NOTICE All pictures starring the universal star, Mary Pickford, produced by The Artcraft Pictures porpo ration cannot be shown for less than 15c as per con tract with the exhibitors. (Signed) Artcraft Pictures Corporation. H. G. R. Adults ... 15c Children . . 5c In the Sweetest Love Story ..the Beloved Star Has Ever Appeared In li fcizrza ft n R Fq) In! IS 11 IS V-JJ 1 1. FSJI" It breathes o' the heather the salt o' the sea it's filled with big, absorbing situations. You smile through your tears at the tender romance of it and the wonderful Pickford personality pervades every incident of this strong and unusually human story. , TODAY AND TOMORROW ARCADE THEATRE START TO ORGANIZE 100,000 BIBLE STUDENTS FOR BILLY SUNDAY IN NEW YORK CITY New York, Feb. 13 (United Press) A committee of churchmen under Herbert L. Hill completed all prepara tions today to start out tomorrow and collect, organise and develop an army of 100,000 bible students in New York for the Bill Sunday campaign which opens in the big iBroadway tabernacle April 1. "We'll have those hundred thousand men waiting at the tabernacle doors when they swing open April 1, too," said Rev. George G. Dowey. "These iclasses aren't for the purpose of let ting faddists blow off hot air. Men won't sit in a draught like that Sun day after Sunday. They want real, definite bible study. By March we've ;got to have them trained and edu cated so they'll have the whole city jon the go. "Tomorrow there will be a big in spirational meeting of the hundreds of men we have selected to do this class organization. "Another big movement that's on foot now is the organization of the business women of the city, hundreds of thousands of them. Stenographers, telephone operators, managers, parlor and nurse girls, all women who are working for a living, including scrub women. "These women are being organized by 300 of the finest women in this town. Among those who have taken the pledge to take off their hats and get dawn and dig are such women as Mrs. John I). Rockefeller Jr., Mrs. L. W. Stotcsbury, Mrs. E. R. L. Gould, Mrs. A. V. Schaufflur and others. "They will organize factories, laun dries, homes, shops and hospitals. They will have lieutenant" in every building in the city. "They also will organize the Billy Sunday lunch rooms, wherein three times a week New York will get something besides beer, bare legs and blatant music with its meals. I mean 1t will have a little religion served with the steak. At these places for ten cents a dinnor and a talk by Sun day or one of his aides can bo ob tained. "We'll have this old town on fire right in a few weeks. Watch us." When in Portland you will fiad The Observer on sale at the Oregwi Ho tel news stand and Imperial Hotel. Our Want Ada bring results. THE WHA T-yO V-MA y COLUMJV BY GEORGE MARTIN Hooks. v Hooks are instruments of tortune scattered around in rivers and dresses to make life a misery for married men and other poor fish. Hooks are all right if you know how to handle them. Some hooka are gen tle, unobtrusive, mild mannered af fairs that sit up on the wall and curl their noses and wrinkle their arms.' You can hang almost anything on them. Other hooks ore quarrelsome,' bel ligerent things that ride around on the heads of bulls and billygoata look ing for trouble. OLD PAPERS For sale at The, Ob eervar office, 25 cents a bundle. -