Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Boardman mirror. (Boardman, Or.) 1921-1925 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1925)
WORLD HAPPENINGS OF CURRENT WEEK INCOME LISTS ARE PUBLIC Brief Resurre Most Important Daily Nfews Items. COMPILED FOR YOU Newspapers Free to Publish Official Figures Supreme Court Rules. Events of Noted People, Governments and Pacific Northwest, and Other Things Worth Knowing. Prince Chichibu, second son of the emperor of Japan, left for England Sunday aboard the warijjiip Izuma for two years' study abroad. Two known dead, 25 or more per sons seriously wounded and a score more or less seriously hurt was the toll of an explosion of a gas machine in a dry-cleaning shop at Versailles, Ky., Saturday. Albred Baer, 3 5, of Aberdeen, Wash., was Instantly killed Saturday after noon when ho was struck in the side by a charge from a heavy shotgun which he accidentally discharged by laying it down over a harrow. Mllttde Lee Mudd, 16-year-old Indian heiress to an estate valued at more than $1,200,000, has disappeared from her homo of her mother, Mrs. Susan Bomberry, in Miami, Okla. Officers have been unable to find any trace of her. Withered hands foldod tattered battle flags and weary feet turned homeward as old men in gray Friday said adieu to Dallas, Texas., which has been host to the United Confederate Veterans since last Monday. The 35th reunion ended Saturday night. French troops under Colonel Frey denburg have- hail a successful en gagement against tho Moroccan forces along tho Ouergha river. An official statement Sunday tells of the cap ture of Oara dos Mozzlat by his army after fierce fighting. The enemy forces Ten estimated at GOOO rifles. The lovely month of May Sunday proved that she can be as flcklo as her predecessor which has always had a bad reputation. Snow flurries and chill, bitting, blustery winds sent the mercury into a nose dive down to 37 degrees and set tho day down as the coldest May 24 Chicago has over known. Hones of a human being about 51i feet In stature, belie vod to bo 2000 years old, havo been unenrthod at a mining camp in Coltonwood Gulch, Itio Arriba county, N. Mex., according to Protestor Fayette A. Jones, mining geologist. Jones said tho bones were dug from under eight feet of hard, compact, cemented clay, unaffected by river deposits. Washington, D. C Newspapers may publish without hindrance from the government or anyone else any of ficial information which congress makes available to public inspection, the supreme court declared Monday in deciding two cases involving the pub lication of income tax lists opened to inspection last fall at the offices of internal revenue collectors. Tho opinion, which was rendered f?y Justice Sutherland, was unanimous and was based upon a statutory con struction of the law, tho court finding that it was not necessary to pass upon the constitutional question of the free dom of the press. The cases decided had been brought by the government against the Kansas City Journal-Post and the Baltimore Post, which were sustained in their contentions by th lower courts. "Information which everybody Is at liberty to acquire and the acquisition of which congress seemed especially desirous of facilitating cannot In the absence of some clear and positive provision to the contrary be regarded otherwise than as public property, to he passed on to others as freely as the possessors of It may choose," Jus Hoe Sutherland stated. "The contrary view requires a very dry and literal reading of the statute, quite inconslst ent with its legislative history and the known and declared objects of its frameVs." Acting on tho court finding, the bureau of internal revenue immediate ly began consideration of plans for a simultaneous release of the current records for public inspection through out the country, but Commissioner Illair was of the opinion that they could not be made available until after July 1. It was explained at tho bureau that the actual work of transcribing the accounts was far from complete in all collectors' offices, and that the policy was to withhold them until head quarters officials toad made their final checkup of the returns. Every effort will be made, officials asserted, to speed up completion of the official egister which .the public is to be permitted lo Bee. 1500 ARE KILLED IN JAPAN QUAKE Area of 25 Square Miles Is Severely Shaken. STATE NEWS : IN BRIEF. I -,; a W rzr school daus rn i u i I r BIG PROPERTY LOSS Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, widow of the war president, registered on tho rolls of the liner Majestic as Mrs. Eleanor Collins, sailed Saturday for Cherbourg, whence the will go to Paris by motor. Mrs. Wilson has as her traveling com panion Miss BellS llaruch, daughter of Bernard m. liaruch. who was chair man of the war industries board, un der President Wilson. Efforts of tho II. S. supremo court to catch up with Its docket aro not meeting with any success this year. The court finds eases continued to be filed faster than It can dispose of them. The present outlook is that when the current term ends next month there will bo more cases on tho docket than it had pending for action when It met last October. While Now Yorkers were sweltering In tho hottest weather recorded for u day In May since 1881, hailstones of extraordinary size were driving resi dents of Westchester aud northern Now Jersey to take shelter anywhere they could find it until tho storm was over. One heat prostration was re ported in New York and the damage In tin' suburbs from tho hail was heavy. Three of tho nine men charged with the murder In January of Abdul Kadlr llaula, rich Mohummc-dan merchant and protector of Mumtaz Begum, the dancing girl, were sentenced to death Saturday. The men sentenced to death were Svafl Ahmed, sergeant -major of tho Indore mounted police; Sham Hno IHghe, captain of tho Indore air force, and an officer of the Maharaja s house bold named Ponde. The government has asked the su preine court to advance tho hearing of Its appeal Involving the imposition of the federal income tax upon com munity property In California, I'nless the decision of tho federal district court for northern California, handed down In the ease of H. D. Kobblns Jr.. aud others. Is reversed, the govern ment declared 177.000,000 must be re funded to taxpayer of California. July Fourth is Defense Day. Washington, II. C. The second na tional defense- test will he held July 4 President Coolidge Monday rejected tho war department proposal that the muster be held on Armistice day, No vember 11, suggesting Independence day "as being a more appropriate day," and preparations were begun im mediately to comply with his prefer ence, despite the limited time remain ing in which to arrange the demon si rat ion. Acceptance of tho earlier date calls for extraordinary efforts to speed up the test machinery so that the muster will show tho maximum results pos sible and the preparation of plans and InstrUCtlO&S already is under way. War in Africa Now Serious. Parts, The heavy losses suffered by the Uifflans at the hands of the French and the reorganization of the French army of 50,000 under General Daugen are looked upon here as in dicating the seriousness of the situa Hon In Morocco. Added In the military angle Is the political controversy going on with re- card to Morocco. The truce declared today, when the chamber decided to postpone until Wednesday discussion of credits fur the campaign In the pro tectorate, is only temporary, for It is considered highly improbable that the Socialists and communists will aband on their opptfsltion to appropriations for carrying on the war. Crew of Diver Ducked. Honolulu. - .n unheralded maneuver gave ttie "gobs" of tile submarine S-2S the thrill of their lives during exer cises one mile off Lnhalnn, it became known at Pearl harbor Sunday. The entire crew was on deck when tho submarine suddenly took a dive, the embers of the crew being carried under water Four or five of them conld not swim, but were kept ufloat by their comrade. The submarine soon emerged aud picked up the men. Boris to Let Three Die. Sofia King Boris of Bulgaria, an enemy of capital punishment. Tuesday confirmed the death sentences of three men who took part In the Sveti Krai cathedral bombing In which 160 per sons were killed. These are the first death sentences King Boris ever has approved. He declared the plot justi fied tho courtmartlal's extreme judg ment. The men are Peter Zadgorski, sacristan of the cathedral, Marco Frledmann and (leorgl Koeff. Big Arsenal Blown Up. Pekln. - Three hundred persons were reported to have been killed or injur ed In an explosion at the Mukden ar senal. The blast occurred In the mid- Famous Resort Visited by Tourists Stricken Pitiful Scenes Enact ed When Homes Go. Osaka, Japan. Unverified reports from Tajima district, northwest of here, which was severely shaken by an earthquake Saturday morning, now state that it Is believed the heaviest loss of life occurred at Kinosaki Springs, where it is said all the build ings were wrecked, burying many per sons. Fires started immediately com pleted the ruin. The estimates of dead In the town of Toyo-Oka vary be tween 100 and 200. Two-thirds of the town was destroyed, including all the largo buildings. Tho fires at Toyo-Oka and Kinosaki burned out Saturday night. Seis- mographers declare there is no fear of further shocks. The affected area covers about 25 square miles with a population around 78,000. The latest estimates place the cas ualties at 1500 and tho property dam age between 50,000,000 and 70,000,000 yen. Many cables from friends abroad are reaching Osaka, Kobe and Kyoto but these cities are quite safe and were not damaged. The newspapers publish most pit! ful stories of the refugees at Kimo saki. Many were in the hot baths at the springs when the earth was shak en, and, rushing out without anv clothes on, a large number were re ported to have been caught by the fires which immediately broke out. and were suffocated. A number also were said to have perished at Kinosaki railway station which collapsed. It was reported that there were C2 known dead at Toyo Oka and more than 300 Injured, but the estimates aro not complete. Tidal Waves Strike Ontario and Huron Buffalo, N. Y. Wind, rain and what was described as a tidal wave struck a series of devastating blows at cen tral and a portion of western New York Saturday, causing property dain- ige estimated at thousands of dollars, but resulting in no deaths and few Injuries. The tidal wave swept virtually the entire southern shore of Lake On tario, from the mouth of the Niagara river at Youngstown to Oswego, rais ing the water about four feet above normal. Its origin remains a mystery. At the time It occurred there was only a light wind. The fury of the wave seemed to center near Sodus point, where be- ween the lowest and highest level of the water there was a difference of eight feet. The same variation was reported from Oswego. Slight earth Umatilla county will come to trial d Rainier. Contracts wene let this week for construction of a new union high school here at a cost of 125,-000. Salem. The new community house, constructed at the municipal camp grounds at a cost of $3000, will be in readiness for occupancy this week. Hood River. Elks from The Dalles and other parts of Oregon will gather here Friday night, when a Hood River lodge will be Instituted and a class of about 150 initiated. Albany. Success attended the an nual spring Jersey jubilee here Satur day when more than 1000 persons at tended the judging of more than 100 purebred Jersey cattle and heard ai program-of speeches. Pendleton. A continuance of the present cool moist weather for an other three weeks or 30 days will in sure Umatilla county wheat growers an excellent crop, according to the opinion expressed by Fred Bennion, county agent. Eugene. One hundred and thirty pounds of poisoned barley was deliv ered by O. S. Fletcher, county agri cultural agent, to the Southern Pa cific company with which to noison gray digger squirrels on the company's right of way in this county. Albany. Greater speed over the Southern Pacific tracks between Al bany and Eugene will be possible after September, 1925, acaording to B. W Reddick, who is In charge of exten sive repairs to be made on the track between now and September. Sandy. Carl Helms, 24, who lived with his mother on the Mount Hood loop road near Alder creek, died sud deniy of heart disease Saturday night while dressing for a dance. Besides his mother, Mrs. Lizzie Helms, he leaves four sisters, and three brothers Pendleton. The municipally operat ed natatorium, built several years ago by funds subscribed privately, will be open this season as a result of ac ceptance of the offer of the city water commission to furnish water, which was made to the city council Wednes day night. jbwe towt , in lons Past lew, so v c. -t I? eRci , . hot W. uifc -6 Sewccu 7 Bee liwe ! BeoTmt vwb. GBAOMomea's Foot! 6oi stt ma, trim! Ceoont .v. - k nir eoufc. - vvixe vie Be. SLllO V W tt Portland. Peter D. Gilbert, ex mayor of Albany, Or., who for the past several years had conducted a grocery store at Killlngsworth avenue and Gay street, died Sunday night at the Good Samaritan hospital follow ing a major operation performed ten days ago. Salem. Approximately 235 laws, comprising the harvest of the last ses sion of the state legislature, will be come effective at midnight Thursday. These are in addition to a large num ber of laws which carried the emer gency clause and became operative following their approval by the gov ernor. Hlllshoro. The Ray Maling cannery, one of the leading industries of this section, has begun the season's opera tions, working on strawberries and gooseberries, paying 6 cents a pound for the former and $50 a ton for the latter. The work will continue stead ily as the various fruits and vegetables mature until November. Pendleton. Two damage cases in the public eye for many months in tremors were said to havo been noted by some residents at Sodus point. Serious damage to shipping and ike front property was reported from Stimmerville and Charlotte, north of Rochester, PoultneyvlUe and Sodus point, Oswego and smaller places long the shore. At Olcott Beach, Wilson and Fort Niagara, all along the shore line of Niagara county, some rise and fall of the water was noted Three Are Drowned In Idaho. Wallace, Idaho Two small hoys, Charles Hogan, 6, and Glenn Hogan, 5, sons of Mr. and Mrs, N. R. Hogan of Mullan, Idaho, and A. W. Scharnhorst, 3, a miner, drowned near hore Sat urday afternoon when Mr. Scharn- horsfs car plunged over a 25-foot bank into the south fork of the Coeur Alene river. Mrs. Hogan. mother of the two boys and fourth occupant of the' car, was uninjured when she saved herself from drowning by grasping the rear wheel of the car as she felt herself elng carried away by the swift cur rent. The bodies were carried down the river and have not ben recovered. Lone Mariner Departs. Vancouver, B. C. Commander Eus tace B. Maude, 77 years old and long retired from the royal navy, is at sea agatp, this time In a 25 foot dory type sloop, in which he plans to sail alone to England by the way of the Panama canal. He sailed from here May , but ad verse winds forced him to return and die of the night and demolished build- a 'aw days later he put out to sea Ings lot'O yards from the arsenal. The: again and was reported r'ecently off cause was m.t known. the Washington coast. Sn . ..... ikvuK . Hn. WX- m wmumsmm . ran r ' i m a Your Last Name Iloll Book It is a greater compliment to be trusted than to be loved. SOMETHING TO EAT IS IT CHAMBERLAIN? 'THIS name belongs to the class of official nomenclature, and like Stewart Is derived from what was originally a more humble office than It later came to be. The chamberlain was probably In early times an official attached to the household of a king or lord, though it later came to be re stricted to very high judicial ottice. The name is spelled In various ways In old records, though at the present time the only forms usually found, besides Chamberlain, are Chamberlin EVERYBODY likes or should like asparagus. Dressed with a gener ous allowance of butter, perfectly seasoned and hot, it Is a dish fit for the gods. Asparagus Soup. Cook two cupfuls of asparagus In three cupfuls of water. When tender, rub through u sieve and add one pint of white sauce, using two cupfuls of milk, thickened with two tablespoon fuls each of flour and butter cooked together until smooth before adding the milk. Season with one and one- and Chnmhprlnn Tlia onullinn 'l,. berlaln Is very much more usual than h?l u'''sI,0infuls "f salt- tew dashes the others. Chamberlayne is a usual f caJ'fnne nnti one-fourth teaspoonful form In old rmaarA. hoth h ,.n,i m UI "lle I'epper, wnn one teaspoonrui of sugar. Boil up once and serve with a spoonful of whipped cream on top of each cup and hot croutons. Chicken In Asparagus. t:ook fowl until very tender and di vide Into eight pieces for serving. Roll each In seasoned flour and brown lightly In sweet fat. Make toast, cut Into good-sized rounds, butter them and lay In a shallow baking dish, place a piece of chicken on each round and surround with hot cooked asparagus which has een cut Into half-Inch lengths. Pour over all a hot white sauce to which beaten egg yolk has been added after taking from the fire. Stir rapidly and garnish with toast points to serve. Liver en Casserole. Slice calf's liver as for frying and cook at simmering temperature In salted water for twenty minutes. lly name derived from an old German Drain and chop fine, add n clove of personal name, Luther, which Is the garlic chopped or a tablespoonful of equivalent of the French Lothnlr. In onion, with salt and pepper to taste. this country there Is a Rhode Island In the bottom of the casserole place famllv of the name who claim Welsh a half cupful of well-washed rice, descent, though I cunnot find the name spread over this one chopped carrot, In Wales. They were prominent Bap- the liver and the liquor in which It tlsts and founded one of the earliest churches of that denomination in this country. by McClure Newspaper Sj-nitcate.) England. One of the large families of the name In England claimed descent from the counts of Cantarvllle, who were hereditary chamberlains of the dukes of Normandy and early Norman kings of England. During the reigns of the Stewart kings there were a number of noted physicians belonging to a French fam ily of Chamberlains. This family Is said to have been founded in England by William Chnmherlain, n Huguenot who fled to England in the reign of Queen Ellzubeth. They were ohstetrl cinns of note who were employed by the queens and princesses of the royul family for many years. In this country there have been two governors of the name, Daniel Henry Chamberlnln, governor of South Caro lina, and Joshua L. Chamberlain, gov ernor of Maine. LUTHER This is a German fam- -O So he Young Lady Across the Way ing this week. One is the trial of the Inland Construction company of Port land against the city of Pendleton for $10,000 damages which the company claimed was caused it by changes In plans for a septic tank which was built by the construction concern. Hood River. Fay Dlnsmcwr of the Oak Grove district lost 14 4-weeks-old White Leghorn chickens from a flock of 500 from a propensity of the birds to eat shingle nails. He left a box containing a quantity, of nails in the chicken house after reroofing the building and the young birds ate them. Mr. Dinsmoor found nine nails in tho crop ol one of the chickens that suc cumbed. HUlsboro. The business men of Htllsboro are. planning a tour of the county in the near future, the idea being worked out with the grange and the chamber of commerce. The Ro tary club will also journey to the country next Tuesday on invitation of' Finis Brown of Laurel to bring the Rotary Anns and enjoy an old-fashioned strawberry festival with the people of the vicinity. Pendleton. The quality of Umatilla county's 1925 crop of wheat from the point of view of freedom from mix ture and smut promises to be better than in the past, according to a state ment by Fred Bennion. county agent His statement was caused by an in quiry by B. W. Whitlock, federal grain supervisor for the Pacific coast, who said exporters have been showing crop in the belief that spring re.eed-! w, " ZZXZ m might result In a great deal of opplnf t0 u,,,, tCueh mixture in the crop. ths Influence of the ihnnM.i JZm cClr Nw.ppr 8rnJlct. ) was cooked (there should be two cup fuls), add two tablespoonfuls of but ter spread over the top of the dish. Bake sufficiently long to cook the rice. Just before serving add a half cupful of cream and sprinkle with minced parsley. Remove the cover and let Husband a Bachelor Old Professor Ah, good morning, madam. So glad to see you. How's stand In the oven live minutes, then your husband? serve. The Lady But I'm not married, pro- fessor. Old Professor Ah, well, well ! your husband Is a bachelor. - - Spanish Lamb. Slice raw potatoes very thin and put a twojnch layer In a greased baking dish. Season well with salt and pepper and moisten with gravy, adding a teaspoonful of scraped onion. Now add a few layers of thin ly sliced roast lamb, season and cover with a small can of tomatoes. Cover with a layer of well-buttered crumbs and set In the oven well covered to cook an hour, then remove the cover and brown the crumbs. Serve with the top of the dish sprinkled with a few spoonfuls of cooked green peas. Beef (roast beef) Is used for this dish also. IS. 1925. Western Newspaper Union.) o In Good Hands 'rlsoner. the Jury finds you Judge guilty. Prisoner That's all. right, my lord ! I know you're too Intelligent to be Influenced by what they say. O HELP WANTED Bug : Hey Mrs. Firefly, I'tS dropped a nickel down this crack. Light It up for me down there and he'p me find - It please. ii a .I .i