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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1925)
Piipio Six Tuesday' Novmilet''17, 1025. TIIK LA GRANDE ; EVENING OBSERVER t i I! p.i j'j I' M !!! i . !, in. Hi: ' ij V ' : J 1 ! 'J WALLOWA MAN IU HI I i.ftllU I iU from lliis wrllon of Urn country I It if vnl!y, tin h wiw n-turnlnif to WAU.OWA. Ore. (Kpcctul)- Jl.' MrUlnntH, u furmi-r ami Block miner nt tlu I'owwutku Ithltre ne- ' Hon. ret m in d here luHt of the wit'k from 1'oitluinl, vvlmrt ho , went recently with a nir of hag nm cattle. Mr. McCllnnls re t iiiTud iiittc opt I mini rf Kurdlnfc tlu! Imiirpvemeiit in market comil tloiiH u lid In firm In IiIh heller thut heller jirlci's for rattle urn not fur ml ii til . Jle hi a ten that in talking with many of thy Htaekmen from ninny hi-cIIohh in the northwest, Unit the ffreater part of them lire wanting 1ock rattle, preferably vonnir Hi nlT, ,nuc) us calves ami . vearlinKH. Mr. McGinn Ih Hays he wiw much young Muff , unld to slticUnien nt irtee ranRlnK1 n round II renin wlilIc in Portland ami thut Hie, el un of HlulT liehiK Hold wan vi'W roiiinion. '1'liin is a, raise in price of at. lenfit one . will during the mnt year and Hhonld la; a source of eoanlderalile encoiint','e-iiii-nl to Klacktaen who are in the huHini'HM wil h Kood yoiuij; trior k. .Much cuttle have luen hIi limed luiliitf the iUit few week, which will no douM cut u rontmleruhlfi rij;uri' with Die uip1" which will be iiodnted next year. Thin con dition apnea in lo have been I he rule over much of the stock mining country, am) cannot help hui re flect in eoiiHiderahly higher prices in the. courm of a few yearn' time. Jloiner Jieclilel, who live on Die 'Cornier John II. I'uet ranch a few itnlh-H cuMt of hero tn tlm valley, dulry herd of G, W. Cameron and has hcen huffy Ihe ptiHt few, days reurrmiKlntf lifs lurtfu harn for car. Iiik for the I urge herd during the winter. Many of the cows are milking ut Uil.s time and, with the Heverui he hnx (It the ranch now, he expects to tnHk about ', during the. whiter. Many of I lie far rnem In Hie county have turned more attention to the milking of a hunch of dairy cowm since the price of biiMcrfat Juih reached it h present liotnt. Tuesday evening about 0 o'clock, while engaged in moving a hand car lined by tlx? wclion crew from the eronning cant of town to I ho tool shed near the depot, (illen HenderKon, wi-cllop foreman, and Joe KleMhninil narrowly escaped aeiimis injury when Ihe hand car on which l hey, were riding wa .struck iiy a Hpecdcr driven by a bookkeeper of the extra untile that Iuih been working on the track up RADIO CARNIVAL I. O. O. F. HALL Friday and Saturday 20th 21st Chicken Pie Dinner Friday,- llsSO unci 5:30 50 Cents - Kitchen Cabinet Orchestra Saturday, 7:30 MO Cunts the, cars from town. As it. w:m juite dark, the occupuuts of each car did not notice the coming f the other. " Jiendersou and c'IcmIi iiiiui were both thrown from the hand car, Klefdiman HUHtainlnff k Mevere cut on tlm Uavk of tiis iicad which rcMUired five nt Itches to close. Mr. Ilcndcrxon was puin lully bruls--d from the fall. Tlm young fellow riding llio speeder was also thrown but escaped with out Injury. Tho Mpecdi-r was con siderably damued by Dm Impact. ilruoc Kishcr of j,eup reccnlly finished haulinjf his wheat to the warehouse ai Kvans. Tho most of tiie ftiain hns been moved from the farnirt to the warehouses at this lime. The roadH iiavo been in ex cellent condition for heavy'haulinff durliiK the' pant, two months, with tlw.' exception f being !ick for a .'-hort time following the fremicni Kliowers of rain. 'Die Leap school has been closed for- the. past week, duo lo the out break of smallpox unions nuiiu- of the children uttendiiiHr. Many of the pupils who were thought to have been exposed have been .vac illated, and it In hoped that no more (mkch will break out. Hoy and Miitfcnc (Ja.stln went to 'owwatka Itldn the Jailer pint of the week. li. II. MedinniM, who ret u rued h-oui I 'oi l land recently, went out with them. The weather has been verv chilly here lor the paNt few days with f rcijucnt. snow I'lurrlex, while I he snow lias hardly hi Id on the uround l I In the valley and lower hill 8-r- tioiiN, Die mouiilaiuH and hiMher iHectioiiH have been while for hcv jeral days. Tin Kround Im not fro zen al thl.s time and a iiumher of jlarmer.s are slill bony plowing, i . i'V Harmon and wife, of l.eap, i made a trip to I .a tlrando the firai, of the week. I t-orae ('uafeins lost a fine slioat. ,1-eceaMy from setlliiK' drowned in a. well. Charles Kllnghnmnter and wife, , of I, cap, were visit oi'H in town the I fir at of t he week, j r. I' ' Itolir and wife, of l.a ;Oiande,W:te visiting friends here' jduring Dm pa.sl week. j ' tlusliu-e VVlsHler of l,a Grande was In this section on business the hitler part of the week. 1 l. Conklhi of irtiblcr was in Diis tiecifon the last of the week with a UiieUloud of apples from his fruit ranch. This is the uecond I rip Mr. 4'onklln has made here with apples during the past couple of week.1. Mc reports , ready salc for tho fruit. Hurley Courtney, a farmer of tho I.oMiue community, was a business Visitor here the Jasl of the week. Hunting $6000 Worth" of Radium i i i L. . i 1 from this that the second growth of n dwooil will be .roudy for cut ting J no years at the name time Unit the virgin luo dlHappeurod. The tree ttwlf i a great factor In lt perpetunDon, for sprouts spriiiif from H stuinps so profusely und lurslstcully thut M. JJ. J'rull. atatu forestwr, sus: , "If the planting by the lumber companies Is continued on the pre. seitt scale, I consider that adequate means will have been taken to re forest the cut-over lands, parti cularly Mini lh cae lands arc rc- fon wtlng more or Ichj by thetnsel. ves by mean of stump sprouts." The redwood belongs to tho pine family or cone bearing group. - In the all of the year, the cones arc gathered from the ground and tak. en to the nurseries of tho lumber companies at Hcotla, Kort Ilrugg and Caspar. (ul. --Hihm! removed from thw none become , trees of six of seven inches In one or two yfari. Tree thus grown In 1930 niniihcr.. 3,250,000. In the winter of two yearn ago a start of replanting was made when 8o acre were reforested. hast wlnterf 3,000 acres were planted, and the program for the present winter, ennbrucca 6,000 acres. When thu .total reaches lii.ooo acres yearly, thin with natural reproduc tion, it is hoped, will prest-rvu the redwood for posterity. Creole More Ketumls For -- , A'ugimiit JtiihsiMii Children commissar "fef ducation'has found. He, char.- "than 3O0.000, the MOSCOW.. (A'l) Vagrant children In Unas la number more icrlzcd It as a situation menacing .i... .,...ir... n.r Itw '(iimtrv unit nr.. cordingly h organised a new sy stem of factory sehoolBor home less children. S The big cnters. Iik Moscow, Leningrad, KJiarkow and othersare overrun by homeless wifn who sleep o nthe sidewalks, half naked and half starved. "The "Central Lenin Fund" for vagrant children, to which the government contri buted several million roubles and to whirl! another few millions have been added by voluntary con tributions, lias been found insuffi cient. iki.a r.,s.tnm' BI.nn1 IntnndM in j teach the waifs various trades in addition to their general education. .M-vomy-nvo mini-.r).iiiis nf r.-niimn. worth ?i;ouo, wont down a drain In St. JtsepVs Hospital, St.Tuui, -Mitin. and the" rfwncr gave It up for lost., flint J'rof 1 1 my i:ril:sHii of. tho lnlv. i.-iiy of Miunesyta U hunting it with bin htiKe tketrosi-npo,' whieli will icviiter the onamaiions ol radium within a distance of 7j k't-l- lie rn.iy havt to trace a nul$ of sower before he finds it. s 1L A&rtPf : j : nil urn i k t 1 jn .' jawirv. " 9- MacMillan Chooses "A Weil-Balanced Diet Built Around Meats" Nothing developed on the trip to onuae me to revise my idea about f ooda j which is that a well balanced diet built around meats yleld3 the be3t health results. On tho way north we had fresh domestic meat from the supply taken aboard when we sailed. After v.e reached the North wo relied upon the wild life of tho region, using seal, walrus, caribou, muskox, Arctic hare, and many kinds of wild duck3. Every day we had freah meat with plenty of fat at at least one inoal and usually oftener when sup plies were plentiful, and every one came through the four months in excellent condition; in fact, most of the members of the party gained weight. While we often hear it claimed that eating too much meat is unfavorabla to heelth, it i3 a fact that such ailments a3 gout, hardening of the arteries, and othor disorders attributed to an ex C033 of meat eating are quite unknown to tho Eskimoa who eat nothing but meat. In my own experience I have never known anyono to attempt to live in the Arctic on a vegetarian diet. On the othor hand, every Arctic oxploror now adays relies upon the native fresh moats as a sure preventive of scurvy, a much dreaded nutritional disorder which was prevalent in earlier Arcti-: ex perience times before wo loarnod a lesson in diet from the Eskimo, Making Ejjoris 'jo Save Famed California Redwoods B A X Fit A N ' I K( 'O, (AI') In creasing effort, with prospect of success, Is being made lo -preserve from extinction the world's tallest, and most beautiful '.Tree, the Ser ijuoia sempervirens. or redwood. Kpruul over the 'northern hemis phere ' of Kuropo and America when the earth, -was young, the tree was scoured from the globe by ancient ice. sheets until there remained only a forested belt, of a few hundred miles along the coa.s(, of northern California and a bit of southern Oregon. .There in cathedral grandeur It raises its lof ty spires It 50 feet and more, its name, .sempervirens ever living arouses the Imagination, for It is from 2,000 to 8,000 years old, only a thousand years younger than its cousin, tho .Sequoia (Jlgaiitea ' of the Sierra Nevada fountains, Magnificent timber, .resisting moist 11 re and decay for , centuries though fallen it was cut and ship ped throughout the t'nited States and abroad In' such quantities . as to endanger Its e.xhausMon. Arou sed, The Save-The-Hod wood -I ca gue, composed of such nature lov ers as l-Yjtnklin K. Lane. l,)r. John '. Merriam, W HI lam Kent and otheiH, actuated by love of beauty, in recent years )y,ia raised "money to buy some groves and induce the slate of California and various or ganizations to preserve others. Today, Lri,fil5 acres have been freed from the woodman's menac ing axe. In addition, the league has initiated a program Tor a nat ional redwocfd park of lio.nnn acres of trees that were a half lhou.s;tnd yearn old when Ihe star appeared l'er llethlehein. The lumbermen have HynVpath i.ed wlMi the spirit of cnn.xcrval inn, and moved ureitt ly by consider ations of rtnaneinl iiilvn nt age, Pe nan reforesiatinit so extensive a a to promise complete replacement of trees cut down. Merchantable redwood timber in the forests, esti mated at 50 billion feet board measure, will be reproduced by plaining at the rate of 550 million feet board measure yearly, assum ing the present rate of cutting and reproduction. J-uinbormen figure You're just about 2 minutes away from brcak ' fast when you reach for a package of New Style H-O Quick Cooking Oats. The new cereal with the wonderful "baked 'in" flavor. Toasted oat flakes that cock into granular oatmeal., Smooth--firm in texture never sticky or pasty And healthful! A wealth of cnergy-builiUng carbohy drates, tissue building proteins and vitalizing minerals -arc in every dish. , " ' Y ' That "all-night cooked" flavor in only two minutes FOR MORE THAN BOYIARS MAKERS OF QUALITY PRODUCTS H-O HORNBY OATS H&CXEKS CBIAM FARINA sick e n'i crux tvotwauT tun QIU HOMt&riAD PAMCAKl t-XCUl QUICK COOKING . ,. OATS Cook2t63 minutes only r 1 A ftllMlilV I ' ii. wu ;t mirl. ' I t in.-- The above message from Donald B. MacMillan, tho famous Arctic explorer, is of vital interest to every house wife. The MacMillan expedition carried Swift's Premium Hams and Bacon and other Swift branded products. Swift & Company lii-ail flu INi or .v t Taint ,vi"i inn hnv roc l,l!-ht I'li'lli l.tr pi.M rl. ..,! I":iinl, MtMivc I'iiiii 1 M Sf- in. am! .! m. I'lU I ;i:i!ii'l. ir I .u; Irr Cil.n', MlWl;iv-lt, lluil Sttni' ( tiillliot. K will pay yitii lir itionry In lm tinw, vwn thnttuli 31111 ilun I iim' It till ii intr. Wc ulti lm (Vmi'iil I'Hint fur Mimvo ami v-im-ni Iiimwm nt tin muiw rht. Will yiiit (th )iM' hnr nil I ho l l Irmv with us )ossH)li n Uh ytmv rimi iii-th-rv. Wt kiimv that n all wtuit to ift l tho hi'vt otwil n- sihlo fur oiir 111111117 hut only hnvi thiit h'ltt'rifi. Ilmwcr, wr ia pul rn I ho fourth. Urn .No. 3 Coilnr Shlnttlos nt I.HA por M. nit Ktitn.v Hkr hrmi In a wlml-lonii. Our hhiulo 4ih .n'stmhiy ttuiiMintml ut owr l-V- IMMt. Claude C. Pratt Lumber Co. "ihr I'ont Mun'.o Krlfort" l'l- IVHinilry. I'hnne U-tt9 9io KitDdaf T1utnM To men who still cart their tobacco around in a heavy tin All thru the ages Stone Age, Iron Age and Card-board Age tobacco transportation has been a tough task . . . Then the Tin Age, C . and for years, now, smokers have bravely borne the weight and ex pense of the tin . . . But comes the dawn of a new day . . . The tin has been canned . . .Granger's new foil package takes an awful load off men for it's not only light weight but. it cuts out the heaw "carrying charges" on tobacco. No tins, no fancy frills but, man what tobacco! Granger's new foil-package is hit with stnoUers everywhere. Con venient, yes, but what's more im portant it cuts out the costly tin gives smokers for ten cents, to bacco of the same fine quality thai costs fifteen cents ia tins. Itocm & Mvtm TtwAcro Col Packed In heaw foil instead of tin-henc 10 " ir sinssss ssss