La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959, August 01, 1927, CITY EDITION, Image 3

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Monday, -.August 1, 1927.
LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER
Page Three
1
W. W. G. Members
v Entertained At
.V
Miss Fox's Home
Heports of the World Wide guild
)i otitic party held at MeMinnvUJ.'
the first part of July were given
yesterday afternoon when the locl
guild of tlif Klrsf Itnpfist church
met at the home of Miss Mildred
l'ox, on Si ron d street, wit h Miss
Mildred Fox, -Mrs. Wayne ( Tay
lor unci Miss .Mildred Mulholland
IIS llOHtesSCS.
V Miss Marjorle Maguire, the pres
ident, prsldcd over the meeting
u nd t he, minutes were read and
the point standard system was re-
ported upon.
Miss Muguire. MIhh I.uen Oliver
and AW.sh Ida Kinnccs French each
reported on different pluses of tin,
lion.se parly.
" Sirs. Honnie lVnn nnd Miss
Kthel Htown to!d omet h inj? of
last year' house party, und Miss
'oi neliii 1 1 a use n spoke briefly
n)out the first house party, which
hum attended by a delegation from
t he loci! guild t hn-e years ago.
l-'or t he past t wo yea cs 1 he. I .a
(Jr.inde guild 1i:ih ln-en successf-i'
in winning the northwestern dt;.
trlet trophy in Hie point eompeti
lloti. v
A new study hook, "The Open
flute to I'rayei," was started, MIhh
Marjorl" Magmte reviewing he
IllMl rhsiptt r.
T"he girls started work on qulU
blocks, which will he made up and
HOld.
Miss Floi en oo Nelson gave a
report on missions, which was fol
lowed by a devotional service.
Several communications worn
read. including a letter from .Mrs.
i. A. J'olturd, formerly of ' this
'city.
A sociable followed the pro
gram, when refreshments wpi-"
served by the hostesses. Favors
. were all-day suckers dressed in
crepe paper to represent guild
Kills.
Farewell Dinner
. Party Is Given
A farewell dinner party was
gl vo n i ii h o nor of t 'a r 1 Ooch ra tl
'jand 1M Sumner Thursday evening
, at t he 1'rovost borne on Second
street by the Misses Cludys Waid
rol'l and Rebecca Provost.
M r. t 'nchi an and M r. Summ r
have completed 1 he interior dec
orating at the new apartment
house here af the corner of Third
, street and Washington avenue, an I
buve returned to their homes in
.. I'orilnnd.
. r CO VV:" (Special VunVr' ttarbu
returned from Hend Sunday, wliei e
-he was married to Miss Thomas
Nichols, of Itodmond, July 2a. The
marriage was a surprise to bin
many friends. Miss Nichols was
a si udent at t he Oregon normal
school at Monmouth ami Mr. Oar-
Um graduated from the same school
-,lli June. He will leach at Klgiil
-Oils fail.
. At present ,Mr. and Mrs. Damn
are at home at the Nathan Duron
farm north of Cove. A number
Agmel
the concentrated sap of the.
Maguey plant obtained in
Mexico, has been givins
wonderful results in the
treatment. of high bloo 1
pressure, diabetes, stomach
t roubles nnd Uiight'H dis
ease. Moon Drug Co.
Agri:tf Tor
The Owl DniK Do.
Ask for some Agmel lit
eral n re.
DANCE
TONIGHT
Dean Richmond's
Arcadians
Harmony
Comedy
Rhythm
ZllBEll HALL
At
EWSi
of their Oov friends entertained
them with a charivari Thursday
evening. They were Invited In and
u Pleasant sociable was enjoyed.
ut'tu M'htrh ittVeattttii.nta L-n -n '
served.
The home department of the
First I'reabyteriun church will
meet at Riverside park Tuesday
uflernoon at 2 :30 o'clock, wit ri
Mrs. Kny lluell and Mrs, Ada Clar;;
an hostesses. All members nr.
Urged, to be present.
MENUS
JiKKAKKAST : Ot'aime jlliee,
cereal, cream, eggs, poached in
milfv on graham toast, milk, cof
fee. i.l'NC'IIKON Stuffed baked
i tiimnlOfs, steamed brown bread,
cottage cheese, cherry preserves,
milk. tea. s-
DINNl-U : ,'; Smothered , veal I
steak, rieed potatoes, st Minted 1
'Huminer ftquasli in cbeeHe sance, i
i, hend lettuce with hurd cooked egg
dr ens I tig, chilled watermelon, milk,
coffee.
Cottage cheese is known as one
of th "protective, foods." Made
j from sour milk it contains many
J of the lactic tiaeterla and will
, have I lie Ha me effect, I a certain
extent, that sour tniik has anil is
more- palatiblo. The lactic acid or-i
'ganism In sour milk is extremely
, beneficial tp the -uhole system ami
makes for good health.
Stuffed I take I Tm"tMI"
One-half pound green beans, 4
smooth tomatoes, li tablespoons
, butter, Ms teaspoon salh V tea-
ispoofi sugar, tew grains nutmeg,
1 sweet green pepper.
Kernove tops and tails from
beans and cut through the center
lengthwise. Out in diamond shaped
pleceH and cook In boiling water
to cover for 20 minutes. The the
water cook away and add pepper
cut in shreds, butter, suit, sugar
and nutmeg. Out a slice from the
top of each tomato nnd scoop out
the seeds. Fill with beans and
place an a buttered shallow pan.
Hake 30 minutes In a moderately
hot oven.
Expert In Fish
Tells Secrets
Of The Seafood
LONDON (AP)-liow does the
; prawn manage to get Into polite
society while the shrimp is taboo?
.,nere uro fuHhiun in fish just
as there (ire styles In ladies' gowns,
and K. O. Fioulenger, dlerctor of
the London Zoo aquarius, dlscusHes
them in a book lie lias just pub
lished, "A Naturalist at the Dinner
Table."
Houlenger reveals many secrets
of - the restaurant keeper r Fish
dishes often are nut , what they
seem, he tells, and high-sounding
names often conceal the humblest
creatures of the deep.
Whitebait, which is regarded as a
luxury in Knglutid, is a combina
tion of all sorts of little fish. Kven
baby seahorses get mixed with
pipefish, sprat and herrings in tilts
fried mixture of small fish, so the
! naturalist says. 1 n winter white-
bait is chiefly sprat and In sum
mer it is mostly herrings,
j .Houlenger says tinned crab is
sometimes the flesh of the octu
jpus dyed pink. Tnrbot bounefemme
j is often shark or dogfish and
"rock salmon" has no claim on the
salmon tribe. It Is often wolf fish.
'Sometimes it is angler fish.' Fried
I side is often fried witch, or fried
megrim.
ntKXCII IIONOIt IMHOIIHOYS
ItlilOST (Al') The landing of
rr0,tH)0 American soldiers here dur-
ing Ihe war is to be commemorated
i by a monument overlooking the
Iportuvhere the transports brought
in the doughboys. The ft rest city
.council Iris approved Ihe plans of
:the American Hattle . Monument
.Commission and selected the site.
!A shaft nearly Kill feet high will
I be erected.
MANY I SKS FOU IMtl NRS
j once a boarding Inmse delight,
I the prune has worked Itself to the
top. It Is now used in baking and
m t lie mn nufaciure of lee cream
and candy. A fellowship in food
research, maintained at the I'ni
vershy of California by the Cali
fornia l'rune and Apricot Orowers'
Association, used prune pulp as the
basis for I ft different dishes-.
! :
Announcements j
IMPERIAL VALLEY PICKS BEAUTY
ii 1 1 ii yzxr A
Of course, this Is the season for bathing beauties, and to Impfrbtl
valley (t didn't make the slightest, bit of difference that Its only
water Is from Irrigating ditches. The result was the selection of
this beauty, Miss Linda liurrtise, 1 B. and a brunette with brown
eyes n "Miss Imperial Valley,"
Exotic Straps v
m n
Exoric leathers eoutiaue to dec
artite our costumes. A narrow
itrap of Biiitkeskin la used to (as
Lu a em suede glu at tun
wrist.
HEALTH
iv smitk or m:itT ihsi asi;
INNS!U,K TO ,IVi: I SKI T(
i.i ri :
. Ny M .1. Kcirorl, M. II.,
Chicago
Member Oorgas Memorial Inst.
Normally the blood consttluleH
about one-thirteenth of the hotly
weight of. an individual. A hun
dred and thirty-pound persons,
therefore, would have about ten
pounds of hlond circulating in his
body.- A powerful mechanism, the
heart, pumps this bloo to make it
reach every part of the body, e
pting the bulr, the nails, and the
outermost layers of skin.
The stupendous amount of work
done by the heart of a healthy .ad
ult working man. In 24, hours is
equivalent to raising a ton about
eigtity feet. Muscular activities,
respiratory motions, nnd other fac
tors aid in promoting the normal
progress of the blood through Its
cycles of travel.
When one considers the heart's
daily work, the fact that the heart
is ut tucked more or less by dis
cuses and accidents, and suffers
from the faulty hubits of Its own
er, tlie wisdom of conserving the
strength of this organ is apparent.
It is difficult to recognize early
diseases that make their appear
ance without pain, without loss of
appetite, without loss of weight,
without change of color, without
median leu I disturbances, without
impairment of muscular strength
and endurunce, and without dlm
inuution of mental faculties. Fre
quently ft is impossible to recog
nize such disease without employ
ing the most modern methods of
diagnoHis. such as physical, chem
icul electrical, biologic, x-ray, mic
roscopic, anil other examinations.
Unfortunately, high blood pres
sure und early heart ami blood ves
sel ehunges) generally com under
this clussl lieu t ion. It is common
experience, in examing an appli
cant for life insurance, for the
physician to discover heart and
blood vessel diseases, blood dis
eases1, Hrigbt's disease, diabetes, or
even cuncer and other malign
ancies, without the slightest, con
ception on the part of the individ
ual examined of being afflicted
.with any Illness whatsoever.
As we are dealing primarily with,
heart and blood vessel disorders,
thy first ami most important mess
age to those so afflicted. is to
place themselves under observa
tion of experienced physicians who
will prescribe and direct the prop
er treat men t. My so doing it Is
possible lor the patient to alluin
old age in spite of his' unfortun
ate heart und blood vessel diseases.
No man of middle uge should
join a physical culture class with
out first having a thorough physi
cal examination in order that the
physician may advise as to the
safety and extent of such exer
cise. Without this cxamlnul Ion
most physical culture classes for
the middle-aged health Seeker do
more harm than good. Repeated
pressure exerted upon weak or
diseased vessels may first weaken,
then ililate their walls, and fin
ally, at an uiuisual exertion, rup
ture vessels that could easily have
been saved.
Hardened arteries will not dil
ate, but will break under pressure.
I 'nl'ort unali'ly t bis or ten happens
to blood vessels located In the
brain. The blood clot may be lar
gely ubsprbed, after first or even
second and third attacks, resulting
in I he recovery of normal, men
tal, or muscular control; but the.
first attack may cause instn nt
death.
7 ... , SSM9i,
Girl, Caught In
Pistol Battle,
Gets Assistance
BALTIMORE (Al Ueing
caught in the cross fire of pistols
idurint? an attempted escnpa of two
prisoners from th Maryland penl-
lieniiary "was nothing' to Mary L.
Sullivan, prison telephone opera
tor. Miss Sullivan snld thnt the ex
perience was no more exciting than
being caught between a barrage of
angry voices at the switchboard.
Charles V. I Country) Carey, a
"lifer." and Benjamin F. Npruglri,
convicted burglar, were headed Co
esctipu when they encountered two
guards not fur from her switch
board. Pistols barked and one of
th guards fell mortally wounded.
Instead of taking cover Miss Sul
livun rushed to an uiue-room and
screamed to passershy for help.
(iuurd Charles K. St oris: "sbot it
oui" alone with the convicts. He
hud dropped both of them with
bullet wounds In the, legs when the
warden und the police arrived.
Kven had the battle ended dlffer
sntly, the authorities said. Miss
Sullivan's actions would have pre
vented a general delivery.
Miss Sullivan disclaimed and
credit for her presence of mind.
"1 didn't do any more than any
one else would have dime," she
Id. i"I run and cried for help."
More than tl. 000. 000 In waut-a In,
the unnuul lonn due. In sunburn,1
Kiy Ihe Ktutistl!anM. I'i.Ihou Ivy n
uniither way to " vucaliim.
It seems 4 rent Britain and a few
of the others ar considerably off
their naval bases.
"I got the ideaom
Florenz Ziegfeld" fx
Behind the scenes at the Ziegfeld Theatre t .
Gladys Glad is remarking to Flo Kennetiy - y
between acts ol the I ollies, i Hv - -fA ftewl -. ..
; U( Jyr ; .
Aw! Yes, Monocles Tell . -Em -Apart
i
Vs
4 IV
I
i
lu-tti uuj I4iuy luili;o ol Lub Ai.Kult'B bnvti tou.ul u uuw attxly-
muiiuclos. Tho Lcm AnKelea twins, who recently returned tram Kuk
luiul with n line culloctlon of tha eye-pieces. Insist that the wearing
ut the tml-wlndihtplds Is mora than hobby, H'e a science. , The
twins are Illumined by the monocles. Beth wears hers only Ut th
loft eye, while Betty concentrates on her right. '
IMBLER
PERSONALS
1 Mill, Kit, Ore., (Special Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Keefer met with
ipUte a fosH lust week. They dis
covered their two bird dogs killed
about ra fryers. This incident
.caused the two dogs to be sbot
next morning.
Mrs. John Lloyd was in La
1 "I I ! ! J
V: 4 A
t v: A i
w ysT $
You, too, will find that Lucky
Strikes are mild and mellow the
finest cigarettes you ever smoked,
made of the finest Turkish and
domestic tobaccos, properly aged
and blended with great skill, and
there is an extra process "It's
toasted" no harshness, not a bit
of bite.
No Throat Irritation
Jf;-. r-'
fe,1- At i
, Grande Kriday on business.
I II. A. Ncwhlil has bought a new
(ruck , and will haul lumber for
Columbus Klsber. This calls for a
(en-mile haul ami (he lumber goes
. to. Klgitt. . '
Mr. a ud Mrs. tJeorge Marshall
und daughter Janet who had start
ed for Yakima lurtt Tuesday, were
culled back on business. They ex
pect to leave Friday.
Hyibert, Nollim has purchased
another truck and he has enguged
for the
grain hauling of several
- No Cough
PUTMAN'S
La Grande's Exclusive
Readu-to-Wcar and Milllneru
farmers. Mr. Miller will operate
two trucks leaving one in the field
to be Ion ded. while he runs the
Other to the elevator.
M r. a n d Mrs. Orville I so m 1 n ge r
und son Jack, of 1'endletou, were
guests over1 I he week end at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. I , A. tls
borne. '
Marie Osborn. of La Grande, In
visiting her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. I. A. Osborn.
William Wlggnns and son Marvin
mailt' a business cull to Imbler Sat
urday. Their home Is ut Lost hie,
Tom Jobtison, A. A. I 'arson ami
WATCH OUR WINDOWS
For Picture Specials
.. TRY
The Oregon Hardware
FIRST
As the producer of 'The Ziegfeld Follies' I Jcnoni '
full well how important it is for my stars to have
clear voices at all times. Several years ago, when I
first began to smokeLucky Strikes, I noticed that my
voice remained unirritated after a most strenuous
time directing rehearsals. I passed this informa
tion on to my stars and now we arc all agreed:
Lucky Strike is a delightful smoke and most as
suredly protects the voice, eliminating any cough
ing, which often interrupts a perfect performance."
Sum Hrooks were business visitors)
at Imbler Krhlay : ' i
The farmers have commenced tn
put. up their second crop of alfalfa
and harvesting of the wheat eropi
will begin this week.
A Washington woman was went
to prison for killing a butcher. She
got a lot of sympathy, though, when
she explained that she mistook him
for her husband.
Jernsa lem hail
Trying to attract
lion trade?
fii earthquake,
he winter vara-
Florenz Ziegfeld,
famous
theatrical
producer,
writes: