Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Boardman mirror. (Boardman, Or.) 1921-1925 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1922)
:: The Only Restaurant in I Pendleton Employing a full crew of white help. I T H E FRENCH I RESTAURANT I HOHHACH BltOS., PROPS. g Elegant Furnished Rooms in Connection. ALFALFA FARMS Diversified Tracts Small Acreage Town Property Uninmproved Land With Water City Lots in Iloardman Town Lots in New Town of COLD SPRINGS Farms and City Property ill all parts of Oregon, Washington and Idaho FOR EXCHANGE I E. P. Dodd, Hermiston J tllMfMIMOHIIIIlMUfrv The Continental Insurance i Co. f AT V 1. wiiiiim PROFESSIONAL ( ARDS 'i;rMii!!:iini!i:,in;:.iLi!i;:LiujH:.ij.:inimHiiiiiH:n:::;,j; -iiU!M!Un:tiiiii:;t,:,!: S. E. NOTSON ATTORN E Y - T - L A W Olfice in Court House HBPPNER . . . OREGON FRAN CIS McMEN AMIN Lawyer H EPI'NER, ' OREGON Roberts Riilldjng, 'Phone 648 JAMES I). ZURCHER Attornej-at-Law STAN FIELD - . OREtiON Will De at the Highway Inn Wed nesday of each week. DR. W. W . ILLSLEY Osteojmthic PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON 'Phone Ues. 711 Office 551 'dice over Bank Bldg., Hermiston Calls answered at all hours. WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Masonic lUiihling Heppner, Oregon. DR. F. V. PRIME I) ENTIST R Y Dental X-ray and Diagnosis HERMISTON, ORE. Bank Building Phones: Oilice 93. Residence 751 DR. FRANCIS P. ADAM; PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON HERMISTON, ORB. Hank Bldg. 'Phones: Office 92. Residence 595. Office Hours 9-12. 3-6. Calls Answered Day or Night. . TYD D AVIV T Cld A NT t Aivinurt u. ijivoiLi t PHYSICIAN & SURGEON T-fc J 1 J A J. JL j , , JvtiSlUeilt AireiH T answereu ai an nours proinpti ir.l ,.ro...i 1'. ,11,15,,., X T . 1 f u.j, x Duaiuiiuiii - Vicguu f UMATILLA - - OREGON In Irrigon on Wednesdays. In Iloardman Tuesdays &, Thursdays IIIMIMMitmatHa4-t- ! GRADUATION GIFTS are In order now. Come in and let me show you what 1 have in watches and jewelry etc. iWM. H. OGDEN Gifts that Last. Hermiston - - Oregon Dr. A. H. Johnston Physciari and Surgeon Calls answered at all hours In Boardman Wednesday and Satur day mornings. Office phone M 151 Res. M 33 2 Arlington, Oregon. il'IWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllB I R. N. Standeld, President Ralph A. Hoite, Cashier Frank Sloan. 1st Vice-President M. R. Ling, 2nd Vice-President Bank of Stanfield Capital Stock and Surplus $37,500.00 T7I T- J- T--X. i T 'J T:. r!n,.t;j!f.ntaj 1 rour rei iem interest i am un nine wiumaio of Deposit. BrWWPnitm"w" nmBfnWTrmr il Wl 1 iHWI'W WIIIIIWHHI Htl IIIWHIII M'lllillllWWf I'l iflHIli, tttttttttttttttttl tl tttti$9t-wrt!rL ARLINGTON NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $73,000.00 x OFFICERS A. Wheelhouse, Pres. E. J. Clough, Vice Pres. ? H. M. Cox, Cashier Chas. T. Story, Assistant Cashier x ARLINGTON - - OREGON ONE AND ONE-HALF FARE TO PORTLAND AND RETURN on all trains of the UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM account the brilliant Pageant of Peace, Progress and Prosperity to be staged in Portland by the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks during the week of May 1.1-21, MM Round trip tickets at this reduced fare will be on sale May 17 and 18 Let our agent tell you about it. Fare from Stanfield, Ore., $10.22 Win McMurray, Gen. Paas.Agt. TRANSFERRING REES TO MOVE ABLE COMB HIVB By H. A. Scullen Specialist in Bee Culture. O. A. C. Bees kept in box hives with crook ed combs are unprofitable and should be transferred during a good spring honey flow to standard movable comb hives, all combs of which should be built from full sheets of foundation. It is only by having bees in movable frame condition thai the beekeeer is able to watch his col onies for disease, to determine whe ther or not he has a good laying Ueen and perform the various other manipulations called for In success ful management for honey product ion. Np effort will be made to give all of the methods which may be used in transferring bees from boxes into movable frame hives. Only a few of i lie simpler methods will be present ed in order to avoid confusion. A lore complete treatise on the subjeci will be found in the Farmers Bulletin No. 961, which may be secured thru l he Extension service of the O. A. C. or from your county agent. Method No. 1. To be used wl en 10 disease is present, and when the ld box hive is shall so that the bees are crowded. Turn the old box hive bottom up, as the combs are not usually fastened to any extent to the bottom. Remove the bottom and on top of the old hive dace your new hive body. A tem porary bottom should be used be tween the two hives which will allow lirect communication between both, but not to the outside, except to the front for flight. In the now hive iilace two or three old, dark worker combs, free from disease. The rem ainder of the hive may be filled up with drawn comb or foundation. The (Ueen prefers to have her brood nes above the flight opening, which it low at the top of the old hive, ami she also prefers to lay in old, dart comb. For these reasons she soon should be found laying eggs in tin new hive body. When she is found in the new hive body, she' should be confined there by placing a gueen ex cluder between the two hives. A: the end of three weeks the yotlnf! brood will be all be. emerged and much of the honey will be carrier1 up to the new hive. The old bo can then be removed and the wa rendered up and refuse burned. MM! Method No. 2. To be used whe no disease is present and when th old box hive is so large thai the bee are not crowded. Remove the oh 'ox to one side and invert it. Plac the new hive with some driwi Corel in the old stand. On top of the nev hive place a queen excluder and o! his an empty hive body or super Now remove the bottom from the ol' box hive and over it place a sma' inverted box. They then should b shaken on the queen excluder on th new hive. If the queen is in th' cluster she will soon be found runn over Hi" ritiecn excluder and try ing to pass down. If she is to be re placed by a new qu3cn, which is dl sirable, she is killed and a ne queen run into the new hive. If sh doe-, no! appear in the first clusfe continue tlje pounding until all th bees are out. Now replace the oh box on the old stand with the ne hive above and the queen exclude; between. From now on the proceed ure is as in Method No. 1. Method No. 3. To be used when bees are in a hollow tree or in th side of a house and It is impractica ble to use either of the other meth ods. Place a frame of brood and ad hering bees with a young queen or queen cell in a hive so that the open ing is close to the opening in the tree. Now fit a bee escape over the opening in the tree In such a way that the bees can come out through the escap but are unable to get back Into the tree. As a result the bees will drift into the nucleus and in a rew weekl ou will have a strong colony on the outside, and a very weak one on the inside of the tree. The bees in the ! tree may be killed by burning sul phur and If there is no disease in that section the entrance can be lefl open so as to allow the new colony ! to rob the old comb of its honey. The : opening should be closed bee tight as soon as the escape is taken away. In transferring from boxes where 1 there is a possibility of American ' foulbrood, method No. 2 could be used, but it would be necessary to use only foundation iti the new hive and I the old box should be taken away im I mediatly after transferring and de troyed. In fact, unless the colony is very strong, it would be advisable not to try to transfer at al! where disease is present, but rather burn the whole thing up and avoid any : possibility of spreading the disease I to other colonies In the process of J trasferring. OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAL INTEREST Principal Events of the Week Briefly Sketched for Infor mation of Our Readers. The organization of Stayton's new cannery is progressing at a rapid pace. The registration figures for Jack son county show a total of 11,203 voters. Pnr the first time in I. inn county a I woman is serving as foreman of a grand jury. A Special city election will be held in Monmouth May 19 to vote on a new city charter. Work of paving the Rosoburg-Wil-bnr section of the Pacific highway began Monday. One person was killed ami 120 were injured in traffic accidents on the stveets of Portland during April. E. B. Pitts, extension specialist of the Oregon Agricultural college, held a week's dairy conference at Klamath Palls. Twenty-four students from the high school at Carlton passed a day in Salem inspecting the various state de partments and institutions. Miss Harriet Griffith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin T. Griffith, lias been selected as queen of the Portland 1922 Rose Festival in June. Representatives of baseball teams In Kugene, Albany, Salem, t'otttige 'irove and Roseburg met In Hug; ue and discussed plans for a valley hague. Resolutions opposing the passage of the McNary Diamond Lake National milt bill were adopted by the mem bers of the Baker county chamber of commerce. The annual central Oregon back neet, with entries representing grade and high schools from Deschutes, Jef ferson and Crook counties, was held In I'rineville. Through the assistance of a number of civic organizations of Portland the state training school for boys at Salem will organize a band within the near future. The mill of the Oshkosh Lumber company In the Mohawk valley above Mabel will resume operations in a few days. The plant has a capacity of 50,000 feet. Improvements aggregating between $50,000 and $60,000 will be made at the plant of the Oregon Pulp K Paper company in Oregon City within the next few months. The United Contracting company of Portland has received the contract for building the Mill Creek mark t road, extending 7V4 miles southwest of The Dalles, on a bid of $51,472.12. Reports received from packing ;ilants at Astoria Indicate that the Ifttcn of salmon In the Columbia rive: Ince the season open d has been ht. The fish average small and here are lew of them. Mere than 200' laundrymen and vivos from Oregon and other Pacific oast states will assemble at Tin Dalles Thursday, Friday and Sat urday, at the annual con v. id on of the Oregon State Lanudry Owner' asso elation. The question of whether the state fish Commission! order clos ng tie Willamette slough to salmon fishin-' will stand depends upon the outcome of an action pending before Judg' Eakin in the circuit court at St Helens. A movement has been started for annexing a large section of I .a Grande, petitions having bee If circa lated for that purpose. The section that it Ih hoped to bring into the city has a population, according to the 1920 census, of between 1100 and 1200 Albany's automobile camp ground In Bryant park will be free to tour ists this year. Toll has been deter mined by the park board after a pro posal to make a small charge fur the maintuinaiice of the park had been under consideration for several weekl Hearings will be held at the Mult nomah county court room In Port land May 27 on the petition for the reopening of the western grain and hay rates cases. Henry C. Keene, examiner, will conduct the hearings for the interstate commerce oommll sion. George L. Howard of Jacksonville has obtained the retort permit at Diumond Lake, according to an an nouncement made by the forestry of flee at Roseburg. Mr Howard agrees to spend $15,000 In three years in constructii g a summer resort at the lake. The first installments of five war rants for loans, made payable to ex service men under the soldiers' tush bonus and loun act, were issued by the secretary of state at Salem. Th I t service men to whom the warrants art made paable are i.aitd V. Woods ol Dallas, Daymond M. Connor of Port land. Otto W. Helder of Sheridan, Her man F. Pupke of Portland and Fred erlck Jensen of Portland. The loanr were of 3000 each. Echo, Oregon, May .", 1922 To (lie Republican Voters of Umatil- in, Union and Morro.N Counties: On behalf of the candidacy of J.T. I ; Inkle for joint senator fro n Uma tilla, Union and Morrow counties we respectfully submit the following facts: Mr. Hllnkle is a lawyer and irriga tion farm expert of twenty years of actual experience and active practice in Umatilla and Morrow counties. He was the first secretary of the Oregon Irrigation Congress, and through several years ol' hard work built up Its membership and made it a power for good in the state. During the sessions of the legislature for 1913 a. ul II 1 ' lie was chairman of the House Irrigation Committee and was a recognized leader and authority on nil ma tiers pertaining to irrigation. At the ( lose of (he 1 9 II! SOSSlon Speaker McArthur, HOW Congress man from this district said: ".I . T. Hinkle is a patient, Faithful a ud consistent worker at all times e immanding the full confidence and respect of his fellow members, can d.d and fearless in debate and a Soor leader of remarkable ability." linn. Ken Selling. Speaker of the (louse in 1915 said: "Mr. Hinkle handled his irrigation program with underfill skill and ability and was loved and trusted by all the mem bers whether agreeing with him or lot. His ready wit and sarcasm lulled many a freak proposal and his candor ami sincerity of explanation saved ninny deserving hills that eti otherwise lost " tan, editor of the Ore-, WOuM have In C. C. Chapt gon Voter, in 192 2, says: cellent record legislat u res was looked his issue of April 1 5, 'Hinkle made an ex lo the 19 1:: and 1915 as representative, and up to as a debater and Boor leader of unusual ability." Hon. Clarence Reams, afterwards I-. S. District Attorney, who sat with Mr. Hinkle in the session of 1 9 1 II said: "llinkle's appeal for the des ert land settlers of Cenlral Oregon rfas a classic and unquestionably the ablest oratorical effort of the session." Fred N. Wallace, President of the Oregon ln;g:!lon Congress, said: Enkle saved Central Oregon from ruin and we o v e him a debt of grat itude which no time nor service on our part can repay." Will R. King, Chief Counsel for the U. S. R. S. said: "For a hard job Hinkle is the best man In Ore gon." These are but a few of the many good things said of Mr. Hinkle in the public press by prominent men throughout the State, but sufficient to show his fitness for the position we hope to have him occupy. In the recent light for reduction in the Umatilla County Tax Budget Mr. Hinkle took an open position fully in accord with the announced policy of President Harding in the ret a rn of the Nation to normalcy, and ably sought the only practical and risible means of tax reduction, namely, the cutting down of county expenses. In this effort he had the full co-operation and backing of the heaviest taxpayers in the county. Senator BJberhard has been upon the ways and means committee of the Senate for the past four years in which appropriations of public mon ey have broken all previous records. He says in his public declaration for office that he made an attempt to re duce the expenses but was unsuc cessful. I lis law partner. George T. Cochran, had a direct interest in the appropriation of $20,000.00 for the State Water Hoard and we do not believe that Senator Kberhard was in a position to suggest any cuts in oilier appropriations. We appeal to you to vote for J. T. Hinkle in the coming primary be cause we can thoroughly vouch for his honesty and integrity and rely upon bis promise of some substantial relief from the burdens of taxation, and because we know that he will prove an able and fearless fighter lor the things we need in Umatilla, Union and Morrow counties. Respect fully submitted. ECHO REPUBLICAN CLUB, It) ,1. trunk Spinning:, Secretary. iway Inn L. S. BONNEY, Proprietor Boardman, Oregon In Connection BOARDMAN AUTO LIVERY "We go anywhere night or day" Hon. Will H. Hays l.-CII lltM l!l:i'l lil.H'A X NATIONAL COMMITTEE j Ralph Iv llllains Vice Ccaimian Republican National ways 'oinjuittec Telegraphs Ralph Williams WESTERN IMON TELEGRAM A I.S2 NY 93 Mine PI New York NY 1205P May 5 1922 Ralph B. Williams, Republican National Committeeman Portland, Oregon. Mutual friends have told me that you are a candidate for re-election as Republican National Committee man this year, and I am constrained to send just this word of appreciation for your splendid service on the com mittee all the time that I was chair man. Your election as vice-chairman of the National Committee was the fullest possible evidence of the Committee1! gratitude to you and their conridnce In your gnat future u l ulncss. to the commlttM and to the party, In this I Join most heartily. Kindest regards and best wishes al- Will II. Hays Vote X13 To the Republican Voters of Umatilla, Union and Morrow Counties. I respectfully solicit your support at the primary election on May II til for I the nomination on the Republican ticket for Joint senator of the 19th j Senatorial District. I have lived in Dmatllla county for the past thirty yars and an a property owner in each of the counties comprising this district I have Iwen a lint til ul worker In the licpublican, party for the past 25 years and an active and consisiani supporter at all times of the nominees of my party, if return id to the legislature I will stand for the same loyal service to my constit uents, that I rendered In 1 ! 1 :i and 1915. I will have no bills or pet . measures of my own and will dCVOte my entire time and attention to the inn-rests and wishes of the people in 'Umatilla I'nion and Morrow counties and will give exactly the same service and attention to I'nion and Morrow that I would give to t'matlllii lly way of platform and public pol icy I am for a line of retrenchment and tax reduction in both county and state budgets in proportion to the lower prices of labor and farm pro ducts. I favor our present plan of highway and market road construc- ion and think It rh aid continue un til a good and I lent road system is provided for ail parts of the state. Thanking yo uln advance for any assistance you can give me In the primaries and with a promise to re turn my gratitude In servlcu, I am itespectiuiiy yours, J. T Hinkle.