Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Boardman mirror. (Boardman, Or.) 1921-1925 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 9, 1923)
r in i The Boardman Mirror Boardman, Oregon LUIK A. CLEVELAND, Publisher PUBLISHED EVEUy FRIDAY J 2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE Entered as second-class matter Feb. 11, 1921, at the pos'offlce at Board man, Ore.( under act of Har. S, lS'fl JHPniimuiiiiiiiM'iimin'ninmnim; Indian Lode Tales 1 Prlntlnj in ion of com- T. P OREGON WET LAND PARMER GETS DRAINAQB 0OVR8RS A short course In farm drainage will he offered by (he Oregon Agri cultural college department of soil?, February 10 to 24 Instruction will include soil ana topographical sur veying, water measuring, laying tile to grade, tile system design, and the handling of wet land after drainage. The field work will be supplemented With lectures, and a film The course is de. the needs ol tile layer owners. It is ilatrable to register for the course in advance, with the soils de partment of the college. Prospective students in this course should have high top shoes or gutu hoots to wear on field trips. Many who were enroll. d in the course in former years report greet henefits derived. COLLEGE WW Is HELPERS in POOD pent CONTROL By Ford C. Frick DR F. V. PRIME y DENTISTRY Dental X-ray and Diagnosis I 1IER.MISTON, ORB. r Bank Building Phones: Office 93. Residence 751 Boardman morrow county, ore on a new and growing town WOODSON & SWEEK A TTOB X V. YS-A T-LAW Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon. ,:uhitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii.- 1HL LOST RACE OF THE PAWNEES S. E. NOTSON A I TO It X E Y - AT - I, A W Office in Court House HEPPNER - . . OREGON w Tnei I EN t young, new drainage signed to meet I and wet land E. I! stant dep ISBtl prod Eng Dud strucU nient, control of all stored foo pests infecting such foods v .limits, prunes, raisins, .'rid beans. He says that he is doit that should he of inter help to every bOUMWlfe method of control that h cover from these experiments be distributed Tree of charge. He must have hundreds of si mens under all conditions to ar at any effective control. If an wishes to send In any infected sli specimens it will he appreciated i clou e world was new and (here were Indians who ains, even as we do now. trge Indians men of gi gantic stature and great strength. And they were created by Ti-ru-wn, who created all the world, and all the an imals, und all the people. With these great Indians lived tiie animals even as we have them today. Th giants ruled the world, for they Mtere rerj si rung; and they were so sil't that they hunted the huffalo on fool ; and they would run down a huf falo and kill it with a stone, or a eiuii or a knife. Then even though It wa a gnat buffalo hull, they would swing It to their shoulders and carry it into camp. So you can see that tliey were very strung, and that they bad great power on earth. For they were feared by all the animals. For many years they dwelt on the plains. Hut as time went on they ceased to honor Ti-rn-wa, who had cre ated tlieni; and they eeavd to believe In him and in the things he did. They thought tliey were very strong, and (hat flsey were mote powerful than Yl-ia-wa himself. aiMj they would no longer pray to him. DR. W. V. ILLSLEY Osteopathic PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 'Phone Res. 711 Office 551 Office over Bank Bldg., H. rmiston. Calls answered at all hours DR. ALEXANDER REID Physician and Surgeon l M M il l. A OREGON JAMES D. ZURCHER Attorney-at-Law ST AN FIELD - . OIJEGOX Q E-i O S5 O o , O c w c DR. FRANCIS P ADAMS PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON HI RMISTON, ORE. Bank Bldg. 'Phones: Office 92. Residence 595. Office Hours 9-12. 3-6. Calls Answered Day or Night. When the rains would mine 'mill shake their lists ut the aV itrse. and call out had word, A was too warm or too cold. would laugh at Ti-rn w u. they d v they i eoff then and and (nay dls-will )ted it his strength, and tell each oth er stories of how they would run the world if they were in power. All this time Ti-rn-wa tried to keep them hap py, and did favors for them, and Con tinued them In their Strength, and did Dr. A. H. Johnston Physelan and Surgeon Calls answered at all hours Boardman Wednesday and Satur day mornings. Office phone M 151 Res. M 332 ArIIngtona Oregon. In ill n Jack-rahhlt campaigns, condusted in four slates by the Biological sur vey, I'nlted Slat' s department of ag riculture, havj. been particularly ol foctlve during the past year In Idaho, Washington, Oregon and Texas greal nunihers of jack rabbits were destroyed by traps and poison These rode ills were unusually de structive to alfalfa, cotton, bay, muskmelon, lettuce, grain and otl crops. In 10 COUntlet of Idaho 32, 235 pounds of halt treated with 2159 ounces of strychnine were used on 312,3511 acres of land. By poisoninu and by drives till). $50 jack rabbits. aOOOrd tni to actual count, were de stroyed in that slate. In six counties in Washington 155.500 were report ed kilted, and in four counties in Oregon it is estimated that 350.000 were destroyed. In three counties of Texas 35,0(10 Jack rabbits were ac counted for. Bu and giant brack llghtulng i the giants, the water giant poo Id ti r tin ally o tot make the world a hap t Ti ll' on lids il stl'i .Uio again ti e, s Beginning with the grazing sea son of lii.l. permits will he issued to fully (nullified owners for not less than a f i v o ea r period by the forest service, l ulled Slates department ol agriculture. The permiis will author Ue the grazing of not less than a stated number of livestock, which will he approximated to ths number now permitted under established preferences, and will he nun reduc Ible during the period except for violation of the lernis of th,. permit or in emergencies for the protection of the range. The primurv purposi of such an arranKCtuept in to stabil i ' the use of national forests bv all classes of grazing permittees. A nudy B! lbs figures from I V. 0 lo Itttt, sa.vs the I'nlted Stat, s part i. en i of agriculture, shows itai l.uninn lopiiiation has Inrretsoi'. ,u I Miater r.'l.' 'h.-.n livestock. Th f .nr, , 11,1, court rv "tor from year to year than the number of domestic anlmah Sheep have declined th,. most Th la Increasing di"' ,,ty in su,), dying our pnpultMi'M with s'lfl rien BIOS whole maintaining a surplus of meat products for export. The livestock In duslry acts us a gnat stouj . -, voir for surplus ..cams, grasses and forage crops no 'Meat iseat-eaihtg nation has ev t iii'rit.sl tan, me fro;i crop fuilure. Oats is a good glowing feed lie all kinds of voung stock, and is the standard grain feed for horses in most parts of the country. It has n high protein content and is casllv digested, says the I'nlted States de Pi.non ni (f agriculture. Free hie "Doctor, will you give me something for Bty head?" Doctor "My boy. 1 wouldn't take It as a gift.'' e angry, would smile at the rth. lie vent the the storms and the ml the thunder down upon who had seotVeil hiin. And rose and rose, and these le tied before it. But run as they tnlghl they were unable to ,s. cape, and by and by the water arose over the level of the land, and these greal 1 pie, even to the InM man and the last woman, sank down into the soft ground und the mud and were drow lied. When all the plants had been do- I mid had disappeared, then 11 recnlled the rain and the thtin id the lightning and the storm e made the sunshine to shine mil the grass to grow and the o bloom and grow green. And the world was restored to the animals as it was before, but the giants, who I had scoffed Tl-ra-wa, were gone for ever. So Tl-ra-wa made a man and a WOtuan. And he made them small of Stature; and they did not have the strength of the giants. But they were! good and they honored Tl ra-wii. And so ths I tliey might ltve( he gave to them the corn, and taught them to eul tivate it and to dry it ami to make i incul, and to make It their food. This I they did. and so TI rn-wa sent to them children; and the children grew up and a tribe was formed, und that ! tribe was (he pawnees Anil today tliey are slill the Pawnees, and the ' Pawnees have become a great people, j for ever they have honored Tl-ra-wa who made thetu and who gave tin in the corn, and the meat, which Is their food. Today you may go on the prairie at d rind the great bom's of the giants who wen' drowned: and you can Und them In the deep canons, nod deep in the (round and that is the proof that they really did sink Into the ground as is told us by our fathers Note This legend Is distinctly Paw nee, and Is common among the ma lorlty of the Pawnee family (rihes. Tl-ra-wa Is the god of the Pawnees, slm liar to the Manitmi of the I'tes, the Ureal Spirit of the Iroquois and the Napl (Old Man) of the Blackfeet The flood Incident, told here, is told In a little different milliner by the l ies, the Comanchea, the Arspahnes, the Chejr- lines and the Navajos in fact, by practically all of the western Indiana A. H. SWITZER ATTORNEY AT LAW Arlington. ( li eu in K c (!") o c o it-' The Only Restaurant in Pendleton Employing a full crew of white help. T H E F R E N V H R E S T A V R A N T HOHBACH BROS., PROPS. Dlegant Kiit-nislicd Rooms in Coiiiiection. c c w 1 I O 03 Mail orden gi en Hon. sHial atten- MMea-f If ' : 1 " - ttiiiid i iiariiiaty W. K. Smith, Prop. i V i i e Quick Service Sal is tact ion Qnarnnteed Umatilla, Oregon o '3 lO i e I Insurance f J. C. Ballenger j Boardman - Oregon ; ,-wi :-4--. H P4 'A si StmVK Koi; Pi itl JC 1 1 K Oeparttnent of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at The Oallee, Ore gon. Januury "7. 1923. Notice is hereby given that Walter Qordon Oohoon, of Boardman. Ore- Kon Wno. on January 2i, 1918. The Banjo Player made Ibonesiead Kntry No. 019609. There is music in me, the music of f,. WVjSE, being I'nlt "C" Pma- .. peasant ,...ple. 1 wander through , u Townghi tas lev,,., puking PS banjo and sik inu my songs of (he cabin and the 4 ,t:l!l,:t' -; Kast' '"nette Held. At the Last Chance saloon I am Meridian, has filed notice of inten- is welcome as the violets in March; ''on to iake thrts- yesr proof, to es- here Is always foot! and drink for me tahlish claim to the land above de bet e. and the dimes of those who 1 scribed, before C. G. Blayden. Pnjt- iov, honest music HehlBd the rail- 1(1 S!atP8 Commissioner, at Iloard- load tracks the little children clap , , ,. .... . , . ,,. , t , , , . man. Ore . on ihe 12th dav of March. Ihelr hands and love me as they love Kris Krlngle Hut 1 f.-Hr that I am ' a failure. Last aighl a woman called j Claimant names as witnesses: me a trviulxulour. What Is a trout. a- Karnest A. Prown. Olen E dour? - Kenton Juoiison, In the Kansas Hrown, Kay U Brown. W. O King. OHj Star a uf noarimiul, ore. J W DONNELLY, 2-1 Register Making Deductions. Her Mother Now that vou're mar ried, you should lu'lp Kerdlnsnd to save omethlne. Mrs. Jutiehrlde 1 do. I've already helped him to wive something on h!s Income tax. Z a as o H z 5 5 B! oi z , I Q 3 I BOARDMAN MORROW COUNTY, OREGON WHY BOARDMAN? miiiiiuii! iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii mRmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm BECAUSE THE CLIMATE IS GOOD THE PEOPLE ARE SOCIABLE INTELLIGENT ENTERPRISING TOWN IS NEW AND GROWING LOCATION WELL CHOSEN HALF WAY BETWEEN THE DALLES AND PENDLETON ON O.-W. RAIL ROAD ON COLUMBIA RIYER SOIL WILL RAISE AN YTHING WATER FOR IRRIGATION FROM WEST EXTENSION OF UMATILLA PROJECT McKAY ( REEK DAM WILL BE BUILT ASSURING MOPE ACREAGE UNDER WATER Boardman is a New Town But Not a Boom Town WRITE SECRETARY OF COMMERCIAL CLUB BOARDMAN MORROW COUNTY, ORGON 4 OR 5 HEAD Milch cows, fresh snd coming fresh; 2 brood sows. Pi.roc. and 10 weaned pigs. C H, MeELROl Bermlstoa j BOARDMAN MORROW COUNTY, OREGON w o c as o w o n o C C w O o o o o w c n o a as O w m o o as C3 O w a as o w o o o a as ? C W c o as o c c H W O o o cs as o H W o o as k n C A NEW AND GROWING TOWN D