Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Boardman mirror. (Boardman, Or.) 1921-1925 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1924)
The Boardman Mirror Boardman, Oregon Miaa Esther Messenger of Walla Walla, Wash., stopped on her way to Portland to visit with Mrs. Oscar MARK A. CIjKVEIjAND, Iliblishe Beck and family. Mrs. A. T. Hereim, Ixcal Editor. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY J2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE- Entered as second-class matter Feb 11, 1921, at the postofflce at Board man. Ore., under act of Mar. 3, 1879 Jack Gorham plans to go to lone Thursday. A. Porter Portland. left Wednesday for IRRIGON NEWS ITEMS Mr. Wells, county assessor, accom panied by Mrs. Opal E. Clark, demo cratic nominee for county school aup erlntendent, spent a couple of days in the Irrigon district the first of the week. Mr. Wells checked up the Mrs. Fred Graham and two , boys and Mrs. Wilbur Johnson and two children returned Saturday from a lengthy visit with their mother at ; assessment rolls and Mrs. Clark was Brogan, Ore., a small town near out to get acquainted with the voters. Huntington. They are living in the Albert Macomber house. The first carload of watermelons moved out Wednesday. Mixed cars Mrs. Clay Warren, who remained , should be moving now regularly ev at home with tlje two children, was : ery two or three days. So far in hostess Sunday at a delightful din-'quiries and demand has greatly ex- ner, having Miss Edna Broyles and ceeded the supply, and judging from her friend, Miss Glissie Winn of Col- the line-up now, Portland markets fax as guests. Miss Winn came on will not be reached at all. Pride of Opal Wagner is employed on the No 2 and Jeft Qn ft nl ht trftln tgf Jnlgm cataloupe have been Hcked highway below Arlington. George Agee and Charles Barnes were homo a short while Monday. Mr. Beck, who drilled the well is now drilling at the A. P. Ayres ranch for an artesian well. Mrs. Jack Gorham spent, the day Some excellent wells have been with Mrs. Royal Rands Wednesday her home. up culls and all. All former patrons are coming back with bigger standing town orders than last year. FARM POINTERS Zelta Bleakman, niece of Charles McDaniels, is visiting at the McDan iels home. Lem Agee of Olex is visiting with Bob Rayburn. He la a brother of our genial George Agee. A new porch at the Mutual Cream ery station adds to the comfort and appearance of the place. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lamoreaux of IlTigOtJ were visitors at the Fred Graham home last Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. Williams and fam ily or Welser, Idaho, visited at the Fred Graham home Thursday. W.l I Stewaxt' house, which is oc cupied by Prof. Russell, is being re papered and re-palnted inside. Oscar Kosar spent the week-end at home with his family. He Is working at Shotwcll's plant near Adams. drilled in that part of the project, From Department of Industrial Jour Messrs. Dillon, Jenkins, I. Skoubo, j nalf8tnj Oregon Agricultural College Knauff and Hendricks all having ar-i tesian wells. Oregon potato growers working ' for seed certification And it best to Mr. and Mrs. Bert Bleakman and .ioln he inspector in making field ii i.,, j , u,, examinations. Weak, diseased and two small children of Hardman are ofl Velns &re polntpd by visiting at the Chas. McDaniels home. the coiiege extension specialists Ito Mrs. McDaniels and Mrs. Bleakman be dug and removed from the field, are sisters They came Tuesday and Disease may otherwise spread rapid- are on their way to Portland. Mr. rrom plant to ptajt untfl much of me lliu is uisquttuiieu. failure lu do the roguing at these times will cause rejection of the field. Bleakman has the East End school route for the next year. Mrs. Paul Smith received the sad ....Cooking grains for pig feed has news Tuesday of her father's death been shown by feeding tests at the at Spokane, Wash. She had planned - A- 0. experiment statijn to be , , not only of no value, but detriment- to go to Spokane for a visit the earl- M wfi whe ft may naye a lor part of the week but her prepa- Hiight beneflcal effect on the starches, rations were not complete and the cooking seems to lessen the digest1.- news of his death came before her Witt? of protein and mineral mat- departure, Her father was about 75 tdr- l"0'10? n V"T must be cooked for best results years of age and death was caused Roots are not often improved by from dropsy. cooking, and steaming alfalfa has not proved profltagle so far at Cor-vallls. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Johnson and family of HunJi'iiKton stopped the early part of the week at the Graham home Chai. Wlcklamller and son re turned lioiiie from Portland recently. He drove up In a Ford which he pur chased there. Baird Patterson and wife went to Heppner last week for several days' vIkIi. Noel Klllz looks after the gar nre in his ubHcnec. Leo Root Is again working on the highway for Bailers & Baucrs em checker on the night shift with head quarters in Rcho. Harry Warren and wife and son, Clay, returned from tneir vacation Oregon bankers expect to keep in Sunday. They motored to Olive lake touch with agrlcultnral conditions in where they did some fishing, and , every part of this state in the next were at Granite. Lehman springs and ; year and initiate programs of agri . . , ., 'cultural development as a part of the other places of interest. While there ( broad p,an outlhled by the agrlcul. Ihey met N. A. Macomber and wife turai committee of the Oregon Bank who are also on thlr vacation. They ers association, and adopted at the picked about 7f. gallons of huckle- conference at O.A.C. under the aus pices or ine agricultural commission berries, which was their main pur pose In going. Boardman friends will be Inter ested to hear of the marriage of Miss Gladys Paine of Longvlew, Wash., who was married in Portland recently to Ole Olson of Clatskanie. Mrs. Ol son Is thedaughter of Mr. and Mrs. of the American Bankers association. The State has been so divided into nine groups that the work may more effectively be carried on. The gonp arrangement Is to enable each member of the agricultural com mittee to have an active part In the work By the assignment of a defi nite territory he Is expected to be able to go ahead with the program ,i. Vi ! r 1, In 1. I u lo, until la In. of '., C. C. Paine, who will be remembered daptod fo hja rpRon Every mem. by the earlier residents of Board-, Der wm be expected to send the man. She is an attractive girl and chalrmnn periodic reports of what Zoe Ifndloy returned Saturday on No. 24 from Monmouth where nIic at tended ii term of summer work In preparation for teaching. Frank Snplee, wife nnd daughter Of Payette, Idaho, were vlsllors at the 0, G. Blayden home Wednesday. Tlie have been to the coast. ltiilph Davis and family and the Oorhani family motored to 1'malllla Sunday, where they enjoyed the movies and had picnic lunch on the beach. Judge Bryan and wife of Caldwell, Idaho, stopped a short time to see c Q Blayden's The Judge Is an old friend of Mr. Blayden's and was on his way to Portland. Mrs. Crawford came Sunday inorn ng, She Is welcomed back by her many friends. She hSH been nhsent nt Portland nnd Oregon City Blnce last November. her Boardman friends will wish her well In her new vocation. She Is a recent graduate of the Longvlew high school. Supt. J. O. Russell, recently of Wasco, Ore., has arrived with his family, Mrs. Russell and son, Elmo, and will make their home In the Slew. in residence this coming year. Mr. liiissell Is to direct the Board man school activities for the year has transpired In his county. Three meetings of the agri cultural committee of the bankers' association are planned for the year. One of these will be at the time of the Pacific International Livestock exposition In Portland, possibly In conjunction with the agricultural of the Washington Bankers' associ ation. Another will be In southern Oregon early In 1 !) 2 5 . and the third. In central or western Oregon some time in the spring. The chairman and field secretary will arrange to attend all hese meetings. The report adopted called for con- of local ronlitlons ith a view to constant improve ment in methods of production and marketing: coordination of farming opening September 8th. Mrs. Rus sell, Is a graduate in piano and will tinned study be available to those who wish to si mi y music. They are planning on a trip and will return the latter part' nd manufacturing as the hest mean of August to make final preparations to community prosperity: collective for the opening of school. marketing wherever practicable, with najiTraii?Hi saies agoncnn jos, ino standardisation of products and sta bilisation of prices: intensive and C. C. Richmond, Jr. of Moro, Ore. arranged to meet his father and diversified farming and the building mother. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Rich-, up of a regular income, with ilio self-contained farm as the ideal; and the adoption by 8 Very bank of a def inite program of agricultural. Indus- Mrs. Irene Sprgue Is leaving this week She hns been In charge of the service station for Chas. I.ntouroll for the past year. Rumor has it that she Is to be married. Some or the officials oftheO.W. were Boardman visitors this week. In the party were J. P. O'Brien, gen eral manager, F. N Flneh, general superintendent and M. C. Williams, division engineer. Malcolm Haieltlne and wife nnd throe daughters were overnight visi tors nt the C (1 Blayden home early this week. They are on their wav home to New Plymouth. Idaho, from the coast. mond, whose home Is in Pendleton, at Hon rd man for a Sunday get-to-J gether visit. Mr. Rlchmond.Jr. waa ,ra n(j community bettermen accompanied by his wife and son, - and also Miss Wilma Roardman and BrUOS Qochneur, both of Moro. With Mr Richmond, Sr., was a young charge, tlcorge Lynn of Pendleton. A barnyard golf contest was staged to determine the champion horse shoe pitcher but the sets were not finished and the series will be con cluded nt some future date. WOODSON & SVVEEK ATTOltNKYH-AT-I.AW Heppner, Oregon. A. H. SWTTZER ATTORNEY AT LAW Arlington, Oregon Why We Sell Tires Keep SMIUNO WITH KELLYS a ' I PERSISTENCE !i Br THOMAS ARKLE CLARK ! ! I JDaan of Men, University of j 1 7 Illinois. ' 1 1 I FOUND the old man sitting by the roadside of an English country by way breaking stones to be used In keeping the road in condition. I had seen him frequently as I passed to and fro to the village, but today I stopped a while to rest after my long walk nnd to talk to him. He had been a stone-breaker all his life, and he took not a little pride in the fact that the smooth level road over which I had traveled owed much to his labors. Great piles of rough stone lay along the highway piles that suggested unending toil to me, but he seemed to regard them only as an opportunity. I took op one of the hammers that lay on the ground and tried my hand at the work with rather ill success. A few fragments were splintered from the rock, but it did not break. I was hitting too vigorously, he suld: I was expecting to accomplish with one hard blow what It would take a half dozen or more to do ; I wanted results im mediately. "Time and patience," he said, "time and patience, and the stones finally yield, and the plies of broken stone grow." , I have thought of his philosophy I often since. Impulsive youth finds It , used to a litt,e hlher priried hard to waif, if results do not come than other tires, but now reduced in response to our first efforts, we prices are in effect, on account of grow lrrltuted and discouraged and give up the Jask. If the construction in the translation seems Involved, if the experiment falls in our first at tempt, if we do not solve the problem or make the sale, or uccompllsh th? task, the first time we hit It an Intel lectual blow, we have a tendency to throw down the hammer and say that the thing is too much for us. Most of us need a little more persistence. When I have worked with a man or a task or a problem for a long time and have got nowhere, when dis couragement is about to overwhelm me, I often think of the old English man sitting by the roadside quietly and persistently hammering at the heavy stones. "Time and patience, time nnd patience, and the stones fi nally yield," he said, and I take cour age as I recall him. If we work long enough at a thing, if we refuse to give up, we are likely to win. I, 1924, WeHterti Nswspapsr Union.) . ' Like a Phoenix From thte Flames iiiiiimiiiiiiiniiimn I Sell Insurance i J. C. Ballenger J X Boardman - Oregon X Kelly-Springfields are among the oldest and best known tires on the market. They have always had a reputation for giving exceptional nidlenge and remarkable service. The Kelly tires of today are thte finest that Kelly has ever built. They are stronger, sturdier, will stand more punishment and give more mileaKe than the tires upon which Kelly reputation wits built. larger factory facilities ,and hence the costs no more than other tires which have never borne the Kelly reputation. We sell Kelly-Springfield tires be cause we believe they will give our customers the most mileage and the best service at lowest cost. If you will come In and refer to this advertisement, we will make you a discount to introduce the Kelly tires. Seaman's Garage IRRIGON .... OREGON Let us print those butter wrappers. S. E. NOTSON ATTORN BY-AT-LAW Office in Court House HEPPNEil - - OREGON ROUND TRIP Excursion Fares on sale dally to September 15 Kansas City 68 40 St. Louis 77-90 Chicago H2.40 Detroit 1(12.02 Cleveland 104.96 Washington 137,90 New York 143.H0 Boston 149.90 Corresponding: fares to other Important centers. Final re turn limit October 31. 1924. Liberal stop-over privileges going and returning. A side trip to Yellowstone at small additional cost. CaU on R. S. Davis, Agt. Boardman, Oie. WM. MeMURRAV General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon The people of the Northwest were dismayed Wednesday afternoon, July 2 3, when they heard of, the dis aster which had overtaken the great Pacific International Live Stock Ex position . Its magnificent building in North Portland, Oregon, caught fire from a burning shingle mill. and in a half hour was reduced to ashes. This splendid plant, the largest and most conveniently arranged and equipped structure of Its kind in the world It covered overlO acresof land. It cost approximately $500,000. How ever, tlwas insuredfor about $350,000 and general manager, O. M. Plummer states positively that the Exposition will be held November 1 to 8, Inclu sive, without fail, and that already assurances are coming from every quarter of the compass of aid and entries of livestock. He says: ...."The Exposition will be bigger and better than ever. Naturally, all our i plans have not been completed, but we expect to rebuild and work will be commenced at once. The Pacific In ternational Live Stock Exposition is so solidly founded and so important an institution that even a great blow such as this cannot halt its growth and progress." The new building which will take the place of the one just destroyed will follow the same plan, so ad mirably did that plan prove to be. The amphitheatre probably will be made somewhat larger, but the gen eral construction will be the same as before. It seems that it cannot be bettered. The Highway Inn 0. H WARNER, Proprietor Boardman, Oregon I Wholesome Home Cooking Best place to eat between The Dalles and Pendleton Recipe for Apple Irishes In the interest of the apple in dustry the Union Pacific System has published a very attractive booklet entitled "150 Recipes for Apple Dishes " This is a publication ev ery housewife will greatly appreci ate. Copies may be obtained from the local agent. COMMUNITY CHURCH MCRVICF Kvery Bandar Sunday School 10:30 a. Church Service 11:10 a. Christian Endeavor T:S0 p. All are welcome. NOV. H. S. HUtJHES, Pi etor. CALL FOR WARRANTS Tom Hondiicks drove to McMinn- vllle about two weeks ago Ul school warrants of School Dls i riot . No Morrow County, Oregon, from No 4SS (October 28, 1922) to No. 5C4 (January 20, 192.11, both numbers inclusive, will be. paid on presentation. Interest stops on this and dati Pat. a this isth da M Jul - 1924. ANNAHEI.LE H. ROARDMAN, Roardman, Oregon Clera brought Mia Rreeding and four chil dren back with him, The latter is Mr Hendricks sister They will spend the balance of the summer WANTED Fresh eggs and chick here. French Cafa, Pendleton. auSltf bWsJX?Mbt! I I I I I HI 4W(rjk for comfort and rest and health ahd the X -' MF . "aTA simple life, all in pleasing variations at J ff NORTH BEACH, CUTSOP BEACHES, VH W TILLAMOOK BEACHES or NEWPORT m j ' Our imi win isr ro XXrtmas la lata PatsAc NortkwW I.I miH i ni.aaiiaiisi.il nltllilli ntt i ituli inn anagT.' ' ' A rouatd-trsa siaanasr antntoa tkfcat vsa JfT UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM RS. DAVIS. At Roartimnw. OaaV Wm. McMTRRAT. General l iiiia.it! Ajaat, ARLINGTON NATIONAL BANK "Oldest Bank in Gilliam County" Founded in 1888 OFFICERS A. Wheelhouse, Pres. S. A. Rossier, Vice-Pres. t H. M. Cox, Cashier Chas. F. Story, Ass't Cashier ARLINGTON OREGON immmmmfum mm,mwwxmimm mmmmmmmmmmmm The Best is none too good Try our Sherwin-Williams paints and varnishes. There is none bet ter. also- We have a complete line ot Cedar Flume Stock Building Material Builders' Hardware Cement, Lime, Wood, Coal, Posts W. A. MURCHIE Boardman, Oregon.