Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Boardman mirror. (Boardman, Or.) 1921-1925 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1923)
0- f S 2 ! I. ) L ynmr oh, oscai"ooic in the othhrJ TJ'"'" iv that )f vajelwell' i'u sd w till lilt ROOAV THE CHILDREN ACE ) TOO WiEET Jt,HO KID THEM A LITTLE' PLAYING ?TORE' Wt AWtTlWswf SSI P8A I'M 6CMMt J ' 5j V WELL MOUMG MAN, I WANT Y HIsScST' " 1 Ky n BfcA Iff A DOLLARS VJORTH OF J TOW ' AMP PO VOU "W HUff IS D06 BISCUITS f , VWANT TO TAKE. Vjy n . rifi -vt- Up 1 -em with au MAPlYJ . vj Vul? IB' PREMIERS MEET IN FIRM. CONFERENCE France Offers Proposal Reduction of German Reparations. The Highway Inn 0. H WARNER, Proprietor Boardman, Oregon Wholesome Home Gooking AIIMIOPICS The new tariff on small seeds will mean heller prices on clover, grass seeds, vetches, etc., and should Stim ulate to a considerable extent the sed businss in Oregon. -O. A. C. Exp. station. Best place to eat between The Dalles and Pendleton Bear in Mind that This Newspaper is equipped to do print ing of any description from ji label to ; fnll-slieet poster. Inquiry in considerable volume is reaching the experiment station about how to grow alfalfa in western Oregon. Grimm alfalfa has been very successfully produced on the college farm and il will be profitable when the acreage is increased to 50,000 to 100,000 acres in western Oregon. O. A. C. Kxp. station. iiiJiiBi:':!!; R. N. Stanfleld, President Frank Sloan, 1st Ralph A. Holte, 'ashler M. R. Mug, 2nd ViceiPiies.'dent Vic.o-Pr.ssnlent Bank of Stanfield Capital Stock and Surplus '$37,500.00 Four Per Cent Interest Paid on Time Certificates of Deposit. I .'JO . I I ARLINGTON NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $73,000.00 OFFICERS Wheelhouse, Pres. E. J. Clough, Vice Pres. H. M. Cox, Cashier Chas. T. Story, Assistant Cashier x ARLINGTON - - - OREGON tHMHMMUMHMUUIMIIMHMMHmilllH- Cabbage that is unfrozen and therefore available for marketing is found cither in a storage ware house or buried in the field al Ibis season. Cold air storage is a satis factory method of keeping cabbage, although some shrinkage must be expected. Refrigerated storage is naturally superior to air Storage, Crops of cabbage in home farm gar dens or in commercial gardens may be stored by plowing out a furrow in which the cabbage is placed, ui side down, and I lie head and the greater part of the stem covered with soil. Cabbage thus buried on well drained land " ill keep until the opening slal ion. of spring O. C. Kxp Seed for Bonny Best tomatoes the variety of tomato usually grown for maturing a crop in May in green house hoi beds- is sown about Jan uary 1. Five months are required from seeding to harvesting. Mosi growers use live inch pots for grow ing the plants in their final stages previous to transplanting to the beds. The market is strong for fancy hothouse tomatoes through May, June, and July. March 15 is the beat time to gei the plants permanent I in the beds. O. A C. Exp. station For Paris. The prime ministers of France Great Biitaiu and Belgium, to gether with the Marquis Delia Turret" ta, representing the Italian premier, went into a conference Tuesday which is regarded as the final effort of the allies to reach a collective settlement of the reparations question. Premier Poincaro ef France offered at Tuesday's conference a proposal for a reduction of German reparations 10 50,000,000,000 gold marks. The French plan offers a two ,ear moratorium, but it exacts productive guarantees to Insure the resumption of payments later by the Germans. Under the French plan the class C bonds would be Used to extinguish ihc tarter-allied debts. The French cabinet, under the chair manship of President Millerand, has approved the reparations plan. The diplomatic barometer seemed inclined to take an upward spurt as the statesmen of Great Britain. France. Italy and Belgium gathered tor the anxiously awaited "conference of premiers" which will grapple once more with the reparations problem. The atmosphere was much less pessi mistic than immediately after the abrupt termination of the London con versations lasi month. Although there is a wide divergence of viewpoints the first signs of a movement to bring them into harmony appear to be a result of what Lo Matin calls "the invisible pressure of American opinion." HUGHES OUTLINES AIO FOR EUROPE New Haven, Conn. A suggestion that an independent commission of men competent in financial affairs could accomplish more than a general International conference toward solu tion of the European reparations tan gle was put forward by Secretary Hughes here. 'flu- secretary, who spoke before the American Historical association, add ed that he hud "no doubt" that ills tinguisiHi Americans wouNr" Be willing to serve on such a commission, which, he said, might well be kept free from any responsibility to foreign offices or anj duty to obey political Instruc tions. Referring to suggestions that the United States assume the role of ur biter in the reparations dispute, Mr. Hughes said a sufficient answer to that was the fact "that we have nut been asked." He went on to say he did not believo this government should take such a burden of responsibility. WAR VETERANS GET MORE THAN 95,000,000 More than $5,000,000 wns dis tributed among disabled war veter ans of the Pacific Northwest during the year 1922. according to uu e.sti-; mate given out by the Seattle in trlci office of the Lniteii States Vet-, Brans' Bureau. This includes voca-i tioiial training pay and straight1 compensation e.-penditurcs out noti hospitalization 'xpense c.r adrairus ration ci,m.'.. A total of 681 S new ad amended compensation awards were granted during the year and 255 disabled World War veterans (fare rehabilitated vocationally, it ,vas announced. , There are at present 2 ; :iMn.iurod , veterans in Washington, Oregon and I Idaho taking vocational training al : the expense of the government, aj decrease of 115 tinder the number I enrolled January 1. 1022. A lotal of approximately 4,200 veterans are receiving compensation checks every month. Of this number "4 are perm anentlj and totally disabled and a large portion of the balance totally disabled for a temporary period. Records show that a toial of 15,154 veterans of this district have filed formal applications tor either com pensation or training to date. With approximately $150,000,000 of war risk Insurance held by ex- isrvlce people of the district, the Pacific Northwest leads all other bureau districts of the entire coun- iv in percentage of its World War veterans protected by government in u ranee. Mora than $1, 500,000 worth of war insurance was reinstall d or on , ci ted into permanent tortus mir ing the last four nonths of 1022 Ninety-live per cent ol the St, I olerans hospitalised in tips district are being treated in veterans' hos pitals or wards. The number of hos pital cases not being handled bj gov ernment physicians reduced from 320 10 44 during 1 022. Records of December show an Increase of ap proximately B0 hospitalized World War veterans. The employment sec tion ol the bureau bus found work for 244 rehabilitated veterans since Us formation lasi August. These men receive an average of 1S0 a month, a material increase over I heir pre war occupation pay DR F. V. Pr.DIE I) F X T I S T It Y Plumes : II H1STON, utttfi. Bank Building Oillce 93. Besideuce 751 WOODSON & SWEFK t rORNEYft- IT-1. VW Haspnlc Building Hcppncr, Oregon. S. E. NOTSON MTO B N F Y -AT- I. A W Office In Court House iFPI'XFi: . - - OREGON DR. W. W. ILLSLEY Osteopathic PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 'Phone Pes. 7U office 551 Office over Panic Bldg., Kermiston. Calls answered at all hours. DR. RAY W. LOGAN l 11 Y s If 1 A x ii s I R G E N Calls answered at all hours proinptij Edwards Building UMATILLA - - OREGON In Irt'lgon on Wednesdays. In Boardman Tuesdays & Thursdays JAMES I). ZURC HER Attoroey-at-STANFTELD OREGON I SitfSl tMf 111 'itsiassssstiWWa BTJIiliETIN COMMUNITY. OF BOARDMAN OHTIRC4H SERVICE flMMIMMMMIMMIMMHMMMHM'mt Farmers and Stocko.ro wcrs national Bank 1 Offers Bank Service that suits the needs of Ranchers and Business men HEPPNER. OREGON FREE SFFDS This letter from Senator Stanfleld is self-explanatory: I am nol certain that the free dis tribution of vegetable and Mower seeds is a wise expenditure of pub lic funds, but Congress has author ised it and a limited supply has bees, allotted to me for such distribution it is my desire that everyone in Oregon that wants some of these shall have them, and none wast'd by sending them out promiscuously to people that do not want I hem SI I will not use them. Will you kindly advise all of your readers that desire some of thBSS seeds to write :iie and I will gladly send them. Most sincerely yours. Robt. N. Stanfleld United States Senator. SHERIFF JAILED FOR THEFT Alleged to Have Sold $30,00 Worth of Liquor. Des Moines, Iowa. Sheriff Winfred K. Robb was arrested ill conned inn with the disappea ranee of ttO.000 worth of liquor from the county jail. Both Itobb and his brother, fl SOTS' Robb, a deputy sheriff, were taken Into custody on warrants charging them with larceny and illegal disposal of liquor. The sheriff was arrested by Coroner Cltft, the only offleer empowered to do so. The arrest of the sheriff on the eve of his retirement from office, follow ing Which he was planning to preach a "new evangelism" from the lecture platform, was the most sensational de velopment in the Investigation of the theft of 60 cases of bonded liquor from the top floor of the county jail. Drs. McKenzle Bye, Far, Nos-e Offce: Booms 1, 2, Empire Bank & Lieuallen and Throat and :i, Inland Building (Over I'KXIM.K new IO.X Inland Empire Hani,) - . OHJUUON DR. FRANCIS P ADAMS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON KERMISTON, OltK. Bank Bldg. 'Phones: Oillce 92. Residence 695. Office Hours 9-12. 3-6. Calls Answered Day or Night. Dr. A. H. Johnston PhyscijU and Surgeon Calls answered at all hours In Boardman Wednesday and Satur day mornings. Office phone M 151 lies. M 332 Arlington, Oregon. 10:30 11:20 7:30 in. m. ni Orchard soils studied Keeping up fertility of orchards is a big problem in some Oregon dts trcts, and gets a lot of attention at the vocational course in orchard : management now running at O. A. C. I The kind of soil best suited to dlf i ferent fruits is also gone into Locsv I tion of the orchard wilh reference ! to markets and frost control, and , thinning, spraying, grading' And I packing the crop get attention Bud ! ding, grafting, and pruning are prac ticed In laboratory or field, depend ing on weather. Portland Bank Officials Indicted. Portland. Or On charges of teeeiv lug deposits in the Slate bank of Port land when it is alleged 'hey knew the bank was insolvent, l.eroy D Walker, former president; Conrad P Olson, president, and Anthony Eokern, vice president of the Institution, were ir rested on SCCTSt indictments returned by the Multnomah county grand Jury. E. T. Oruwell, also a vice president of the State bank, is under indictment, and bonds are to be arranged for his appearance here to obviate returning him from California under police e cort In s separate indictment. Kck ern and Walker are charged with mis application of hank funds. Every Sunday Sunday School Church Service Christian Endeavor All are welcome. e. Benson, Pastor NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the interior, II, s. Band OfflCS al The Dalles, Ore., Nov. 21, 1922. Notice is hereby given that Will iam Louis Suddarth, of (rrigon, Ore gon, who, on Mar. 9, I91X, made Homestead Entry, No. 019703, for W'-.NWU, being Unit "B" Uma iilla Project, Section 26, Township ." north. Range 20 East, Willamette meridian, has tiled notice of inten tion to make three year Proof, to tablish claim to the land above de scribed, before C. fi. Blayden, I'niled Slates Commissioner, at Boardman, Ore., on the loth dav of January, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: Charles Powell, W. M. Castle, John tioebid, Hugh Crini, all of Irrl- gon, Ore. J. M. DONNELLY, Itegister. 43-48 NOTICE FOK PUBLICATION Department of the Interior 13. S. Band Office al The Dalles, Ore., Nov. 21, 1922, Solice Is hereby given that Glen F. Carpenter, of Boardman, Ore., who. on Nov. 19, 1920, made II. E. 022078 and on Dec. 15, 1921, made addl H, E. No. 022079, for W Vi NW . SW 4 , SW V HE U , Seel Ion 14, Township 4 north, Range 24 East Willamette meridian, has tiled no tice of Intent ion to make three year proof, to establish claim lo the land above described, before 0. C. Blay den, I'. S. Commissioner, al Board man, Ore. on the kth day of Janu ary, 1923. Claimant nam as witnesses: j. c. Gorbam, Ople Las Waggoner, T. e. Broyles, w. H. Mtftord, all of Boardman, Ore. J. W. DONNELLY, Itegister. 43-4X A. H. SWITZER ATTORNEY. AT LAW Arlington, Oregon The Only Restaurant in Pendleton Employing a full crew of white help. T H E F R E N C H R E S T A U RANT HOHBAOH IlROH., PROPS. Elegant Fnmbd'ed Rooms In Connection. 'IIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIK Secretary Fall Resigns From Cabinet. Washington, D C Secretary Kail of the interior department will resign his office on March 4, it was annouuc ed at the White House Cavalry Sent to Louisiana Town. Jennings, Im The Jennings caval ry of the Louisiana national guard was ordered to sntrain for Moretiuus j yamn. NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, U. 8. Land Office at The Dalles, Ore,, Nov 21, 1922. Notice is hereby given that Ople Lee Waggoner, of Boardman. Ore.,j who, on Nov 19, 1920, made H. E. 022076 and on Dec 15. 1921. made addl It E. No. 022077, for NE4, BHNWH, NfeSSH Bastion 14. Township 4 north, Itange 24 East Willamette meridian, has filed no tice of Intention to make three year proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before C O. Blay den, United States Commissioner, at; Boardman. Ore., on I hi' Hlh day of January. 1923. Claimant names as wilnenses: J. C. Gorbam. Ilobert Wilson, Joe Cttrraa, Glen E. Carpenter, all of Boardman. Ore. j. w DONNELLY, Register. 1 Umatilla Pharmacy w. E. (smith, Prop. Hall orders given special atten tion. Qltick Service Satisfaction Quaraotasd Umatilla, Oregon i Holmes and Edwards SILVERWARE Not Solid but Next Beat also GtOferS Bros. 1K47 In the new Annivci mii) Pattsn I W M . H . 0 ( '. I) E N Gifts Hint Lust. Html is ton, Oregon I I Sell I Insurance i J. C. Ballenger J X Boardman - Oregon X