Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Boardman mirror. (Boardman, Or.) 1921-1925 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1925)
THE BOARDMAN MI RROR VOLUME V BOARDMAN, MORROW COl MY, OK KG ON FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1925 NUMBER 22 IRRIGON ITEMS OREGON NEWS ITEMS OF SPECIAL INTEREST Brief Resume of Happenings of the Week Collected for Our Readers. Memorial Day Mr. and Mrs. VV. L. Suddarth an spending a few days In Irrlgon this week. They are the guests of Mr. I and Mrs., L. D. Saling. C. E. Spcnoe. the state marketing agent is expected In Irrigon for the tentli of June to demonstrate the pro per grading of potatoes and post i farmers on the new law requirements. The one thing growers must bear In Jack Smifh- 16- was downed in the mind is that each and every sack niusr Willamette river above Corvallis be stenciled with growers name and j whUe in swimming, address, and variety In the sack. The1 Bar examinations which were to be law will work considerable hardships . held In Salem July 14 and 15 will De on the small farmers who have only a held on Jn-!y 7 and 8- few sacks of potatoes for sale and 1 The Clackamas county Jersey jub- must comply with the stenciling re-1 ilee was held at the Clackamas county qiuremeuts. There appears to be no ob- fairgrounds near Canby. Jection to the Inspection or proper grad At a meeting held at Halfway the' ing requirements to comply with the . dates for the Pine valley fair were set federal laws, but many of the growers lor September 24 and 25. feel that they should' not be penalized j Several hundred residents of Clat to sell their own products in their own aop county attended the annual Scotch state if they so wish. The stenciling broom celebration at Columbia beach, of sacks to other states is not nec- Wlth a crowd estimated to be the essary. Potatoes are now ready for ; largest ever attending the annual shipment, but these requirements are j strawberry carnival was held in Rose holding up the digging. The settle- burg. U. S. TAKES STEPS TO COLLECT LOANS Attention of Several Govern ments Called to Agreements Made By Them. Washington, D. C. The United Poultry Industry Is Thriving Roardmnn bids fair to become a sec ond Pelatuna. a number of the ranch ers have gone into the poultry business. We visited at the Charles Dillon Poultry ranch last Saturday and saw States government has taken steps to chickens, chickens, and more chickens, sollect not only the war debts owed Mr. Dillon bus White Leghorns, and at by Europe, but the reconstruction the praseftt time has about 700 hens loans made after the armistice. j!,ml about a thousand baby chicks. He Several debtor governments have ; is shipping a case of eggs a day. Wal- talled to pay either interest or prin- ter Knanff has a splendidly equipped cipal on reconstruction debts and in poultry house and has :)() hens and consequence the Washington govern ment has called their attention to the igreements negotiated at the time the loans were made that there would be MOO baby chicks, He ships a case of jeggs every other day. They also have about JMO turkeys. J. R. Johnson has BOO White Leghorn chicks and about no dicerlmlnation in the discharge of CO Barred Rock liens-. A number of inent of the State and Its progress could be made much greater if we Fire losses in Portland for April totaled $53,532.82 and involved four could only stop the making of these deathg accordlng t0 Edward Grenfell, lreak laws and rind something; to help jre marshal the fanner instead of hog tying him with red tape and more difficulties Halt of the state banks in Oregon are not making a profit and must decide Boardman Locals and Personals obligations of this character. Belgium is said to havo paid Great Britain about S. 000. 000 on post-nrm-Istlce reconstruction and aid loans. Rumania also is understood1 to have made substantial payments to nations which advanced relief funds, but has made no move to pay the United States. The Jugo-Slavian government incur red a number of reconstruction debts. others have turkeys and chickens. Mrs. B, L. Beck has Dumber of Turken, havl&g had marvelous success with her incubator, hntchlng 1R-2 turkeys out of 200 eggs. Patent, Messengers, A. HkoUbog and possibly others have f sized flocks. W have the sunshine, the proper soil oonditions, green fe.y, and all necessary reqnlsltlos for suc cessful poultry production. Mrs. Oscar Kosnr and son Everett week end. Returning to their home in but has not made payment to any of I left Sundlay for West Timber, Oregon, Hardman on Sunday. her creditors, and for that roason is Not only that. but. the cost of potatoes rtof,,to, " n near "here Mr. Kosnr is Andy Andregg has purchased a truck not nela t0 ,le 111 Uie snme P"s;unn NEW POTATOES must necessarily be higher with tliis , . .. 0 ., !.... i, i. ,i T ) 11 loiituii oTnei, nnd Hm In linrinK- mnn . . . ' j . ' I Gormen's house across from the school erv other iinv . f- ..n,.. The debt commission sees r.o dis- . " supenntenaent of Banks, aeciar- ,.. t ,,.. ' . timwim. whntnver Ited. They have lived in Jack and is hauling cream to Hermiston ev. M Belgium and Rumania. will have to stand his share of it. Who then benefits by these acts? No one ed at a meeting of group 2 of the Ore gon Bankers' association ait Wood- except the few who find easy jobs to Durn enforce these rules and laws. . , . , . , , , TT , . , Jack McGuire of the University of Mrs. K H. Rick, .hipped five crates 0regon wQn M of Koynl Ann che.Ties to Portland on Qf natjonal oratorlcal WIlt(t from May 28th. Here is another record. Tt R fied of seyen partlclpant8 Tepresmt. beat all past records In this district ,ng unfver8ltle8 of tne coagt McGuire and we understand they are We nrst ls the past two years. Mrs. Kosar plans patrons as well as from his own dairy. tlnctIon whatever between pre and to attend school a! Monmouth this He Is milking between 25 and 30 cows Pst-armistlce debts insofar as the ob- fall. , He has also purchased a number of llatln of- the debtor nation to pay 0, C, Blayden returned Monday hogs and brings the buttermilk from ls concernet'- He and Mr. Brice left here by the creamerv to feed them His son Some consldotion is being given way of Bend and south to Klamath 'Charlie drives the truck. by tne Washington government of- Fnlls rhpnne to ui,in,,,i bhmi MhJ ficials to a proposal to publish a list xans. CJienoe CO Ashianil wnere the Walter Stnl ti Trinton.,1 nit filnni nnH t n n v !?,,, . ,,ii , I. motored up worn vot- of all debU owed the United State, 1. U .(.. t. hntiimpmont was held. mm Saturdnv for n visit nt the NMck . , , , U Tiv,iD, ,yj , . t BBtnnmj ror a usit at the mck inowlllg not 0Il)y t)u, amounts due, - t V'---- rater home . ma w re and two rhiin. ..... LaMumondeera, wiio rented one of the T. K. Broyles ranches o the ICast Knd have a splendid garg len and so fir as we kn nvare the first to have new potatoea, having bad their first ones for dinner on evening last week. BlaytMn also have some line ones. Some Climate, isn'l It? Another bOOII for the project. Cooper home near Ashland. Mr. each case the total payments ren, Phyllis and Bob, who have been made on post and Pre-armistlce debts. now Qualified to enter the national Oregon Royal Anns on the Portland contest to be held Lo8 Aneeles. market. ' .In no K .(.ooper ami wire visu m at tne l.in.. visiting her oarents for the oast week All crops in the Irrigon district, ex , Dedlcatlon of new Umatilla ' h;,me W TT" "B T r6tUrncd home wIt" Mm (,n SPECULATORS ARE BLAMED rept those that were killed last winter, brWge on ColumbIa hlghway hag .will be remembered by a mtmber dBy. look better at this time than ever be- been postponed owlng to the ,nabi,. Boardnmn, people. AtP.utte Lalls, Howb1.( B Calkln8j R : Austt.alsl and Arflentlne Benefited By fore. Several report cucumbers setting ,t of somB of thfl nplnHn Bne(lUprR Mr. Blayden visited home old friends , Krti., r rtal Artificial Grain Market. on, muskraellons and tomatoes in to be present. Tne intended date for hm" g llas aot for 19 yQa''s' , kins. M. K. Flecklnger. L. Cooney, are Washington, D. C.-The recent col Rtturns from Condon 11 .. .. . 4nMntnA . w., ' A Ml- 1 ! 1 1 ?V ,1 . , ,., : . 1 I... ,.f '1,,, uiuwu, ...: ou.c i"""""" the dedication was May 22, but the. ' ""-""" - " '- among thei new subscribers m.,. ......... nlnnfn 1. n TTi . . ... .... Pantfln llltrlin-ni- . : . MMS ,,lirl,f ' celebration will probably be set some- Hoardman Mirror. all made good starts as tar as tne time jn jun6j planting has been completed. Mr. A. j Worfc on Oregong npw ralIroa(, V. Smith, the sweet potato man at Her- route east by Southern Pacljfc miston has not l)een able to fill all his through south central Oregon, by con orders on plants as yet, and this only necting the stranorn Ilne with the has hold lwck the prospects for an Nevada-California-Oregon and rebuild- I.eon ('. Oooney returned Siitvirday from Condon. It 1 ad been raining hard over In that country for several days and on Ids way to "Trail Fork," eighteen miles at Oakland and Oregon City. (luv I.ee and wife were ovei'iilirlif visitors Friday night with Board- tlie ""J'"'01"1 OroWde home Sunday BUtn friends. They left Saturday morning for their home in Perrvvile, to ' lapse In grali prices after their ad- ""MtWast of Condon, h m4m4 w ... I vance of last fr.ll and winter, in the ",tl llls ","'k l , Oregon, Mr. Lee will return to Pilot early harvest if they should continue lng tne latter roa( to Btandard gauge, Rock nKain September. He has to do well. win be started, nrohnhlv. hefr.re Uie end of summer. Mrs! Tm Connev iHHfek-e word ! tlwood Mead, commissioner of this we'k that her brother. Henry B. : reclamation, with headquarters at Ceorger. lias been quite sick with the Washington, has invited Governor "flu," and although he is over the pierce to accompany him on an in worst stages of It, It seems to have spectlon trip over uhe Baker and Vale affected bis hearing. irrigation districts. The governor has accepted. The dates have not yet i been determined. Northwestern Line and Omaha Unite, j Bldg or work on flve Oregon high Chicago, 111. A consolidation of the way projects will be opened in the Chicago & Northwestern railway and office In Portland of C. H. Purcell. dla- the Chicago, St. Paul & Minneapolis trict engineer of the bureau of public j mR a ttl" and Omaha railway, the former of roads, June 10, 11 and 12. Sixty- ; i. been at that place since leaving Board, man two years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Faler nnd Walter Htutte and family motored to Lexing ton Sunday to visit Miss Myrtle Mc Neil. Mrs. Ralph Da'ls was a Portland vis iter last week. Jay Cox was at home on Sunday. His family will remain at Lexington and Heppner for iiiio'her week. Mr. and Mrs .!. A. Blenknian and daughters Belr. a ad Altai were vlsb- QleB H idler home over Mm while at Hermiston. Mrs. Gladys Gibbons and daughter Norma returned Sunday from a visit with the Dale Albright family In Portland. after hist years failure and Kntertain at Dinner which controls the latter, is in pros pect through a stock exchange, it was disclosed here. LORD WILLINGDON seven mlle3 of highways will be im- Arthur Covell, crippled mystic and student of the occult, and L. W. Peare, farmer and mountaineer, were hanged In the execution chamber of the Ore gon state penitentiary at Salem for murders committed in Coos countv. Labor conditions In Oregon have greatly improved, according to the monthly report of the United States j department of labor. Salem will be the scene of the next Oregon state encampment of the Odd fellows, It was decided at the clos ing session of the order at Ashland. A full season of operation of the Al bany cannery has been assured by a bumper crop of strawberries in the district and the closing of the Lebanon cannery. The Salem district of the Portland area of the Methodist Episcopal church held Its annual conference at Sllverton with 86 out-of-town visitors in attendance. T. H. Lonergan, national chaplain of the American Legion, will attend the state convention of legionnaires to be held at Prineville next month aa the guest of the Pendleton post. Flood waters, the result of a cloud burst, tore down Black Horse canyon and swept through the town of Lex ington, leaving In their wake dam age estimated at least as high as i i. , i rr u ... onlnlon of O E Marcv chairman of wink io i no noine or hi j . rother !ii inw Mr. and Mrs. Jack (iorham called at on,nlon ot u- m"-y. ul"11 the board of managers of the Grain " m 1 Marketing company of Chicago, was This extra rain h 'try unusual u caused by the tremendous holdings of that country fur this time of year, and speculators, and the misleading of the II the farmers are wealing a broad public as to the condition of tho smile again, Which seemed to be a world market. Ii I a rt, Mr. Marev. In a statement made iVocoiif Jos Allen has purchased the Jay pubc nere deciared this misleading Knwk stacking outfit from C. S. Cal-: lnformati0n made the American grain k'ns' 1 rices so much higher than the world Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Healey were call- prices during the period preceding ed to Portland the early part of last the collapse that for the time being week to attend the funeral of a broth- the American farmer lost his market er-ln-lnw, Walter A. Packard, who died and at the same time a much higher Sunday of heart trouble after an 111- market was made for the Australian ness of severn 1 months. The funernl and Argentine farmers. ervicei were held Wednnesday, Mr. Henley returning Friday, his wife re- Woman Imprisoned for Boating Child, nmlning to be with her sister for a! Tillamook. Mrs. M. C. Palon, the while. 69-year-old woman who Strapped her llttln granddaughter, Sylvia Louise I Deacampa, aged 4, to death two weeks ('. S. Calkin! and wife entertained at a dellciona elileki n dinner on Sun day. Guests Included W. O, King nnd family, Mr. aut Mrs. Tagg and Mr. and Mrs. Nils Kristensen and Mrs. Glen Madlev. Two Real Americans Are Wedded ago, pleaded guilty this morning to a charge of manslaughter and was sen tenced to the Btate penitentiary to serve an Indeterminate sentence not to exceed 15 years. BRIEF GENERAL NEWS J, '. Ballanger BBd family motored to Walla Walla on Saturday, returning Sunday. Albert Maconiber, who has been lu charge of the maintenance work from Armgton to Rafna for the past year, lias been transferred to Otax Boh Itnybnrn ls building a pirch acroan the front of bis cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Charles htcKlbbon of Ft Collins, Colo., wi re we:k-end visit. ors at the W. H. Mofford home. They had I splendid trip, having three weeks on the way . They plan to tnotoi to E. M. Amnions, former governor of Colorado died at his home In Denver. He was C5 years old and had been In ..in.... v. 1.1. r.. - 1 ........ i " British Columbia and then down to eugue ceiooraica , if ,rnill U.f,ire returning home Mr. and atrv, Barriel van Donga and four clilldl-cn of Cove, ore., trlved Saturday for a week-end visit with j Mrs. Vnn Donge's pareids, Mr. and Mrs I'ligetie Cummins. ThM its unn nirtixiay Buaay, it ws founded In Oberlin, O., by a group pi churches, throwing aside denomina tional lines. Dr. Charles R. Frdman, Prlneoton, N. J., was eleeted moderator of the general assembly of the Preshyteriun church In the United States at the convention In Columbus, Ohio. Brltltih government ls reported to bo refusing to admit delegates from Russia and other European countries who proposed to atle:i. arr ual n terenca of British oomaiucUt pat'.y, which opens at Glasgow Muy 30. The German govern mi nt prop i Increase In tariff ratt rU ni d grains in hope of stablfi -.re' ,i Increasing home production . The ;ro posed new tariff on aut,. mobiles, it Is said, will practically bar American ma chines from German market. CALL FOR WABRAN1 - Freeman Freeman-Thomas, O. C. 8. L-, 0. C. L E., O. B. E., firat Viscount $40,000. Wlll ngdon, who will come to Canada. . . . . . . , '.. ., . ,, , , The Oregon Laundry Workers as bringing with him the grand shield of .. j", . , , , the chief city gate of Onebec, aeUed sociioa held "8 "DUaI conrention In when the English storroWthe city In Pen,flton th OTr 1 deelgatea in 1758, and presented 109aara ago to attendance from practically every city the Sussex town of Hastings by Col. In the state and many from Washing Alexander Murray, in whose anna ton and Idaho. Ges, erst none ai-o on tne neignts or n i. Whinnev nf th Waterlrw are true AnierhHnu helnir full hln-4.rt ln,u.. n, Ml Anranam. w inrougn ine menaty n,i.kborhood has disenrered a rtch McComb. twenty-six year-old Osage Indian, know, mora about ram hi.i. on presentation. Intel of th, offices of Lord WilUngdon. who for- veln of lfc, 0, hu farm business than he does abont tepees. whUe his wife, Cbrystsl May Aakew, date. , , Oigbwa; were on their way to the valley. Mr. .1 h- Fish er and wife of Nolln alNo en me Sntur day for a vlwlt with Mr. nnd Mrs. ttHBintta. Mrs. Fisher Is their niece, L, w. Compton of Umatilla agbati tuted for Bob Smith nt Mesaner last ek while the latter wus sbk With nsIlltlM. Uf nnd Mrs c. S Cnlklns and ' lighter Alice wen guests nt a delic ti chicken dinner on Wiilnesday eve ig lit the W. (I. King home A. I. Ayers nnd W. A. Knanff motor e ' to HerHls tOB Saturday for starker - palm J. K. .lol iison and family were also fallen at the iiiljtntnt town on Friday where Rachel hml home dental work done. Glen lladley mid Eck Warren were All school wnrrnnls for school dih hon I a (toy or two last week, having trict No. 25 ,Mor w County. Oregon, bad to gull aWarlnC iHn-ause of the frum No. oiMt (Hated Han 17. nrr'i to Nc 70,' (dated ehiU- .'. ll'JH, .". '.I ZZZZLln.rmwT?WBU ' both numU-rs Inclusive, will I r.ilii'. Tin v are shearing for Kllken- , nys. who have Kl.OOft beud of sheep. It.ilpli Hofflphrey nnd wife left on pajd Tl'.uisdav for Elgin, where he will lie .. niaihleiuini e work on y17 rrr?lWmaTmM' m. a Lebanon. M.ngane and urn Choctaw Indian. Is a graduate of the Missouri university. Th. Ilament, that the city has consented to counle will en ov tLHr lonermoon In Hnnni.il.. return the trophy to Quebec. ber paint are found In quantities be low the aluminum. Dated this 15th day of May, 1!'J.", Anuainiie ft, Botadttam. M 15 12 Clerk. So DnttCan and Doyle Hubbard of Wlllo-.v Creek were lloaidman vlsllors Wednesday.