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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1918)
WEDNESDAY; AUGUST .21." 1 J i LA GRANDE EVlNTNa ODSli'.RVEn Mi A t PAGE TTVW lWH"'l XT'. mm- o PUBLISHED IN FRANCE BY BOYS OK 18TU ENGINEERS. Filled With News, llulh Comic and ", I'nthetie 'Homo Sons of La Grande There. ' As thoro nro not a few fathers 'right here in La Grande who have sons now in France, members of the l(Jth. Engineers, a necessary section of every army, for" without the engineers to build railroads and bridges, to car ry ammunition and food to the boys on the firing line, it would not be pos sible to carry on the war one single day, the following excerpts from "The Spiker," published by the boys of this regiment, may be of great interest to them, as well as hundreds of others throughout the state, who knew these ayoung men at work on many railroads of Oregon just a few months ago. Company C's claim to a record in steam shovel work by digging 50 cars after supper between 0 and 7:45 p. m., has aroused the interest of men of V Company, who contest the claim. If C Company made a record-by digging fiO cars in an hour and three quarters, with a mile haul, Captain Hauser wonders' how F Company's feat would be characterized. Here is the ground upon which F Company contests C's claim: The record day's digging at tije , S pit was 702 four-yard cars' for ten hours, an average of . 70.2 per hour. And that was done with an 'average haul of -ifiOO feet. The work was done with a Model GO shovel, in a cut from three to cloven feet, and the fill at the dump averaged three feet. ' : That week F Company's crew dug 3U7 cars for a five-day run, or an average daily run of 028 cars for a ten-hour day, or bcttf r than a car a minute' for almost a week. Captain Hauser will wager that the Sccord will stand, anywhere, under similar conditions. Taps Include Lightning Bugs? Does the order, "Lights Out." apply ! tn glow worms? Private It. R. Stinc, tf C Company, wants to know. Re- j VMlly Private Stjnc captured .two; "lightning bugs" single handed and' imprisoned them n a glass jar. "i He put the jar Under his bunk and; after taps hail blown the other nieht he set the gilded creatures and their rlass cage on a shelf at the head of his bed. Instantly a roar went up. "Put out that light," "Taps is blew," "Put out. the censored, censored, cen sored light, sn's. I can go to sleep." Jtut Private Stine came back with "Why don't you tell me to hang a blanket over the m8on? These here nnimals arc glow worms, and 'taps' means nothing in their young lives." "Shine little glow worms, glim mer." This was softly hummed from 'a dark corner of the hut; ' The glow worms kept glowing and have con tinued to glow every night since. Meanwhile several stickers for mili tary propriety nro scanning the field regulations to sec if there is nnything relative to glow worms shining after "lights out" has sounded. Soon after the landing of Company F in France, it lost three of its best men not from bullets, but from dis ease, of one nature or another, and, (itrange, too, out of the entire 18th Regiment, these were the only losses sustained. Captain Hauser, of Company F, at the time of the burial of the men, de livered the following tribute to their memory: It is with no little difficulty that I address you on a subject probably nearest our hearts and yet paradox ical as it may scorn, one we would all be glad to avoid. In the month of December alone, ,ve Inst three more men from our com pany, William Hancock, December 2, tuberculosis; Herman Saupc, cerebro spinal meningitis iind pneumonia, on December 27, and lastly, December ill, one of the boys we all loved and 'admired best, Gerald Barrett, in n train accident. This brings the sum total of our mortalities up to five, and lu"" , , f i, jt can be attributed solely to a freak of fntc that the only five ncatns m this regiment of Eighteenth Engineers Railway, have occurred in the ranss of Company V. This is one of the in- j oYtilirnhlo things of life and while! address ing you ii. hc mess hall the other night the h.'.p .V thought slruck me that innsmuih as death had claimed fine of our best boys. FC i-- had taken them all finm the best com- pa7i. This is certain!.-' "onaintenl way of looking ot it, and .illh,Mii!h, it mi. .mind too cs'itisi'i-al, the i i-- cumstanccs furnish us a justifiable ! whose station is nt Fourth nnd Wnbosh pardon for thus relieving our fo -lings troots, so enraged him after his ntten t this time Wo know we havj the tlon wns called to It by Dan Cnstello sympathy of the entire regiment in that he smashed the "Hun" razor our run of hard luck. It has been -1 against the court house wall, pressed to us in so mn,-y different! "I wouldn't shave myself will, any 1 . of )ll0PC ; 1 ruzors if I had nffirors and enlisted men of E Com- ,111-1 -"I 1 Sany, our brother Company from Portland. . , Every one will admit that the spirit of F. Company has been developed to such a high degree, as evidenced l)y the success attained at everything we have tackled that our espriHe corps can never PC oroscn mm , not be discouraged. While we are atj a loss to understand why these calam-, Itics' should be visited on us. let us re-j solve that they should only serve U cement the rest of u? closer together: and build up our organization to with- -stand any future shocks wo may be subjected to. : May it also serve as a guide for our actions in the future, so that the un worthy things we might be held ac countable for should some familiar disaster abruptly confront any one of us, be reduced to a minimum. ' , If we will consecrate our future standards of living and actions to their memories, then theso five won derful boys who gave their lives for thejr country. . their country The company F Honor Roll, Meccr, Gramps, Hancock, Saupe, and Barrett will not have died in vain. KENNETH D. HAUSER, Captain 18th Engineers, Railway, Commanding Company F. O-C VILLA'S STEPSON JOINS UNITED 3TATES CAVALRY f Manchester, N. II. William Ceraro, aged nineteen, who says he Is a stepson of Villa, the no torious Mexican bandit, bns en listed In the United States cav alry here. Ceraco says that throe yenrs ago, during the bonier uprising. Villa shot his father and mar ried his mother. Cernco came north with the New Hampshire troops when they returned from duty on the border. He says that he likes the United States so well that he has decided It Is worth fighting for anywhere and was very anx ious to know when he could get "over there." . e-o-o-o-o-o FOB ARMY SUPPLIES Build Warehouses to Cost $218, 000,000. Permanent Structures; Are Being Es tablished at Chicago and Other Places. , Washington. Warehouse Construc tion, completed or in process of build ing, planned to facilitate the spoedy handling of materials at storage points for use of the army, Involves an ex penditure of approximately $218,000, 000, tho war department announced. When completed the projects will pro vide about 33,800,000 square feet of warehouse space, additional wharves and piers and Improved harbor berths at various points. With few exceptions, the war de partment announcement says, the projects are permanent structures of! concrete, brick and steel. The build-j lng Is being done under the supervl-! jilon of the construction division of the army. Warehouses have been completed nt Philadelphia. Pittsburgh, Bnltlmore,: Hohoken, JelTersonvllle, Ind. ; Port! Newark, N. J. ; Amerlcus, Ga. ; Chicago, ! Dayton, O. ; Richmond, Vu. ; San An-j tnnlo, and Middlctnwn, Pa. Construe- j tlon Is under way at New Orleans, Bos- r ton, Brooklyn, Chicago, St. Louis, Phil-,' ndelphla, Newport News, Little Rock, Ark.; Schenectady, New Cumberland, Pa.; Columbus, O.; Charleston, &.Cv and Norfolk, Vn. . . . . . ... t 13 SONS, 17 GIRLS IN WAR John Ward of North Carolina Has 35 Children Boys In Army, Girls In War Work. Tlnlelgh, N. C John Ward, n negro, of Goldshnro, has thirteen of his eight een sons In the Ninth nnd Tenth Unit ed States cavalry, while his seventeen dnughtcrs are busy with war work. The facts aro vouched for by Sheriff It. H. Edwards of Wayne county, of which Ooldsbnro Is the county sent. I Ward also probably holds the record j for quadruplets, says Sheriff Edwards, who gives the record thus: Ward was born April 21, 1856, at Jnldsboro. Ho hns married three ; times and his last wife Is now living, j His first wife bore him fifteen chlldron, I four at one time twice, three nt one time twice, one at a time once. Ills second ! wife bore him two nt one time twice, three nt onn time once nnd five one nt a time. Ills present wife hns borne i him eight, one nt a time. Ills first j wife lived six years nnd three weeks , after marriage, his second wife eight years and six months. The number of i boys Is: By first wife, eight, by second wife, five, and by third wife, five. Of ! those now In the service seven are by ! I tI1R nrsr. WHO, live q.v ine neconu mm onc bT (,)c presrnt .fe. Another son . ,)ns sprvp(1 tllc cnVnlry, but Is now . vmg nt Wilson, N. C. ! SMASHES HIS GERMAN RAZOR i Going to Buy Instead One Bears a United States ' . Brand. That St. Paul, Minn. "Made In Germany." ; j These words Inscribed on n brand j new razor purchased the other day by I Tradlc Patrolman Thomns Brown, to," said Brown. "Now I'm going to buy a good razor nnd It's going to be marked 'Slade Id U. S. A.' and don't you forget It," were his parting words. , Pathway to Knowledge. Ignorance seldom vaults Into knowl edge, hut passes Into It through an In- ,prlne,)lnte ,,, of nhn-Ky rvm nKht ,ntJ dnJ. throngh twnight.coie. ridge . .. . Optimistic Thought The jreatest saints have their Urns of faintness. ttm V , lit Out of the Trenches for a Breathing Space ' - ' iV- n'tribWod'''by James Mtgomerjr Flngg. ji "They Are Our Boys; Get : Ready, Everyone, for a Rush!'' The long train of freight cars whined end grumbled as It strove to stop. In thi. kucnvay of a great low building a white capped and gowned woman re leased a sunny smile and, turning bo ber voice carried Into the building, called out, "They are oures Bet ready for a rush." . - Just bow she could toll they were "ours" would be, hard to explain, for at the moment sho spoko hundreds of the dirtiest, grizzliest men a woman ever saw came fairly tumbling out of the freight curs. A moment more she was welcoming this muddy rabble with a laugh aud cheering words. " " HEALTH OFFICE FIGURES GIVEN ISIItTIIS A.V DIHOAI'IIS KOIt TWO MONTHS IX LA GltAXDui" - - BlltTII ItATHlNCISEASES. A recent dispatch from Salem Salem states that, tho month of July iniido a snd record In that city, so far as blrtha aro conwinod, there being only Tivo births reported by the, health officer of that district. In contrast Is tho following list of births, as well as deaths, III La Grande for both the months of Juno and July: The lecoid of births and deaths, as shown by tho records in Dr. Rlcardann's office for the, month of July, shows mi increauo: ill ,thu birth r.ito, as u;;ninst Juno, whilo the death ru.c remains Just nbnm the 4a;no. . . In Juno' there wore seventeen births recorded and ton duutbi- ;In July there wero twenty-tlirr,-- bfitliu and Ion dea-'hs, show ing an increaa:i of six births, uml the oame nomlier of diKttiis. The detailed statements for months follow: ' Tho -report follows: r.ii-tbs. Juno C To Mr. and Mia. gene D. Seldnr, a son; To Mr boi !i Kn. and Airs. .John Perkins, a daiiKb'ler. ' Juno 9 --To Mr. and Mrs. Dank-I A. Carbine, a daughter. Jim.- !i -To Mr. and Jlrs. Hurry C. Liiko, a son. ll--"'o 'y,-. an I Mki. llminan J Vblarsmi. daughter June l-.--io .Mr. and Mrs. Wm. II. Stioil, ii -tup hi-. Jiinu 1,1. -To Mr. ind Mis. Clia3. I. Snow, a ron. June Ii;. To Mi. ami Mi 1. Fr:ink Tditi In-ll, a hoii. Juno 2v- -To Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Zuomlol, a dvightor. June !M. To Mr. and Mrs. Oren Hhin 'Wagio-r, a daurhtor. June :':. -To Mr. and Mrs. Mar ian Clirfoid WoHver, a daughter. Juno C,'. - To Mr. nnd Mrs. Ro liert C. 'iiailhlH, a daughter. June 2.. -To Mv. and Mis. Jno. A. Wiseman, n son. .Juno ';N- -To Mr. ami Mrs. Abra ham Homy Harntl a daughter. June; 29. '(o Mr. and Mis John A. Dnt'iii, .1 daughter. June- ..11 To Mr and Mis Geo. Yompb, JaubVr. June 30 To Mr and Mis Ernest Lf: Key 11: j ar t . a son. Ili-Hlhx. Ji:nc- 11 Nancy Elizabeth Jeii son. rped XI, yenis. Jiin. 1!-Jny livurett Fulkeraon. ager "i yens. , .lone 12 -Josie Krsne" SeM. Pifaiii. "A Great Net of Mercy drawn throuffh ilkHDMitllMMa.1iaM 13- i ' V ! U 1 IheAmericanlted Lross Inside the bn'.lding there were more women, all spick and'-span to white, with faces beaming, handing out good ."homo cooked" food over spotless tiled counters. Some of the boys fairly ran for the food ; others went Into the long batteries of baths, throwing out their vermin ridden clothes to be sterilised while they scrubbed their bodies back to a healthy glow. : ' ' . What luxury It nil was food, tables, chairs, things to read, games to play, pnper for writing, .n burher. shop, a movie theater end good, clean beds I No one ever thought thai, these' bap- ,-;: years. 4 . J.iiio 13 Stephen uidlow Iiay, agr-1 (9 years. - ' June. 13-e-Estnltu KllzalioUi Fow-l.-r, used 5!) ycirs. ' ( June lfi. Elvin S. Gekelur, aged 53 years. ' ' June 21. Robort Loo Wakefield aged 58 years. June 25. John Houghon, ugod 50 years. . ' - Juno 27. Conrad Strnobcr, used 1!) years. ,iiy Births. May 28 To Mr and Mia Oscar iC. IluUcIn, a son, ail Hot Luko. i June 22 To Mr and Mis D. A. Snook, a son, at Hot Lake. ' Jtinf 23 Tn Mr and Mrs Frank Ucchlln, a son, i Juno 27 To ILewLs llidler. La Grande. . Mr nnd Mrs M.. a daughter. In i Union. I July 1 To Mr and Mrs Itouth II. McKonnon, a daughlur, in Union. I July 1 To Mr. C. Patten, a son, July 3 To Mr -K. Dixon, ."v son, and M:s. Harvey In La Grando. and Mrs Howard in La tirando. July -I To Mr and Wrs. Win. G. 1 Fleming, a daughter. In La tirnndo. ! July (i To Mr and Mrs Husk do ! Lane, a t;on in La Grande, j July s To Mr ami Mru C. W. I Ambrose, a daughter, In L:i ! Grande. July 10 To Mr and Mis Clando L. lliisi-k. a dangler, in Union, j J.luly 11 To Mr and Mrs Giles D. Van Honsor, a daughter in Ali cel. I Jnlv 11 To Mr. and Mis Illicit KAISER-AC1 "CAiN ' ATIILAj :FpIlaTE i .'A ' & M.' I 1 ILLfmtm 'MiW" H-" " r pirate' py, smiling women might bo tired, nor were they tired then, even though all day long they had been serving train after train of French and English troops, literally thousands ot them. Yet what did that matter? For these boys that enmo at the end ot a long day these boys are "ours." If your boy Is In France yon may be sure he has a song of praise for tho tine women at work In (lie railway canteens of our own Red Cross, for at every Important railway junction there Is one of our Red Cross canteens and at each canteen there aro 18 women roul, true American women. L, Connoly, a sou. In Lp, Grando.. " July 11 To Mr and Hra Itobt. S. Kakln, a sou. 111 La Grando. - Jnlv l'l --To Mr and Mis Krncst. Wii'tklns, U. S.'A., a daughter. July 15 To, Mr and Mrs John 1). McKay, a: diugh'ur, In La Grandrv July lfi To Mr and Mis Vornon Hull, a dauplilur. In Union. July 17 To Mr nnd Mis Geo. C. Hanson, n daughter, In La Grim do July 21 To Mr and Mrs Thos. McKushlcr, son. in La Grando. July 28 To Mr nnd Mrs Lewis W. Smith, a soli, in La Grundo. July 23 To Mr and Mis Goo. Albert Hughes, a son, In La Grande. July 21 To Mr and Mrs Burmtrd V. Johnson, a son. In La Grando. j I leal lis. j Juno 2!l Conrad Stroubea, aged '19 yiyirs, In Union. ; June. 22 Daliy Hnook, Inr.-tnt, ut Hot Lake. . I July 13 "Mr.-i. J. J. Baker, aged 1 17 years, at Hot al-ko. S July .14 (ienrgo Phelps, aged J22 years at Hot Lake. July lii JiuVhs Mevins, uged 77 yeai'H. at. Hut Lnlto. j. July 22 M:iry I-Ileanor" Scho jflold, aged 10 years, at. Union. July 2 1 W.ildo llolBrord llach, aged 17 yeain. l-.t. La Grando. July 21 William Woldon Mc Cully, aged 34 years, at La Grande. "Aladdin and tho Wonderful Lamp" at Sherry's, tomorrow and Friday. Bring the kiddies and renew fond memories of your youth. ' H-21-lt JUDAS NERO iii ALAR1C MS its'- Y0T PiKEiS CONFIRMED PROOF Residents of La Grando Cannot Doubt ' What Has Been Twice Proved (, lit gratitude for relief , from achea and pains of bad backs from dis tressing kidney ills--thousands have publicly recommended Doan's Kidney Pills. Residents of La Grande, who so testified years ago, now. say the results wero permanent. This testi mony doubly proves the worth of Doan's Kidney Pills to La Grande kidney sufferers. Ed. L. Bussoy says: I had been subject' to kidney trouble at. times, especially when a cold settled in the small of my back. Dull pains annoyed me and my kidneys got badly out of order. About three years ago I began using Doan's Kidney Pills and from that time on, I have had something on which i could rely. Whenever both ered by my kidneys, ft has taken Doan's only a short time to set me right." (Statomcnt given November 20, 1012). On May 25, lftlii, Mr: Busscy said: "I am ready to back up every word of my former state ment regarding my experience with Doan's Kidney Pills, for I know they have no equal. When my kidneys get out of fix, I tnke Doan's and they novor fail to do good work." 60c nt all dealers. Fostci-Milbum Co., Mfgrs., "Buffalo, N. Y. MISSING ACQUIRING A PERFECT FIGURE Most women' who have perfoct' figures did not liavo them orig- 1 inally. They havo acquired them. A woman gradually takes tho shape of her corset so the corset produced by tho most artistic : designer is the right one to wear to secure a perfect figure. nro most symmetrically and nr tisticully designed. They nro comfortable, stylish and grad ually mold the figure into those beautiful lines that ovcry wo man admires and desires. PAULINE, LEDERLE Topless Sport Model Look Your Best and. lie Comfortable in a FkONT LACE CORSET (he only cornet wild (he pntpnlrd VENTILE Back ard Front Shield Be fitted to the corset designed for your figure, Thero nro , LA CAMILLF, MODELS for every figure. They are always fitted by a scientifically trained cor setier. This service goes with the corset and such comfort. A full line of the latest models al ways on hand. . Priced ot $2.00 and up. Mrs. Robt. Pattison Corsetiere - Res. 1702 Oak. Phnn Red 3221 BeFair WITH THE I1UV VOUIt Kl'ITLIKS l-'HOM a rm.vn.NG oi-'i-tois that PAYS ITS ritl.VTEII.H AllOVH Til 15 U.VION' WA(iH Kt'ALK, . AND IS A t'MON SHOP, It Is the oft repeated story. When Peoplo.of I'ulon County want I'rlnliug (hat is hard to execute, when they want u JoU of work douo Unit : i-(MulroA skill, workmanship, careful planning and oarnost applica tion, they, finally come to tho Ubsorvcr's Job Priming Depart ment. ... This office does tho work, but In nil candor, that Is tlio class of work upon which thero Is little profit, and frequently Koino loss, bccmiso of tho Intri cate nature anil tlmu-alisorbiug features of such jobs. "For Instance, when u Tele phone Directory is to print or 11 High School Animal, such ns tho .Mliulr, which is Just Issued, nro to bo priiitpfl, the Observer Job Printing .Department Is the ' only office In tho county equip . mm! with iitiicliliiery, tyio uml printers to get out tho work. I'niim county must havo ami inalntaiii such a printing office, Hint can do (bo toclilncal, high class work when It Is wanted. j!But Wo respectfully call your at tention (0 tho. smaller work, which we nro abiinilaiilly oiiiip peil to On uml which should, to n certain exlctit at leusi, go Ut tlx- office that iiiiiliilains 11 plant capable nf doing the bard class of work. In the smaller work Ibeiii is a profit uml wo respect fully call upon business firms possessing home prhln who luiow upon reflection, that In order to keep n big plant run ning it must havo all classes ot printing. lo not send us your ( I Imii ill. hard print lug, (bat can not be done, by nnvono olsn in (bo county, and then send . your smaller work elsewhere. It IS NOT I ' A HI. When it comes to prices oil smaller work, it stands to re.-iMtn (bat (Ills shop can 11101x1 than couiH-tn with liny other concern, for wo keep n tegular form of oiiniivnieli printers mid pressman mid pay these men nbovo (bo I nlou scale of wages. If you nro n believer in well paid labor mid waul In uphold such principles, send your Jolt prlntinu to (bis orilie, where it will be handled at the least pos sible cost lo you, and at. tho same lime yon arc assured of n good grade of work. Observer Job Printing Dept. Printer Otlll !I.1?I lo-- ' ;:l ' :. tiiYlt, ' rj. f