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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1917)
THE H ermiston H erald VOL. XII HERMISTON, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1917 NO WRITES LETTER FROM DAIRY AND HOG SHOW LIBERTY BONDS “SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE" IS IN FULL Fred Lockley, a well known news paper writer who is now publicity manager in i Oregon for the United States Food Administration, and who was a close friend of B. G. Ruddick, so engineer in the United States re clamation service, stationed here up to two years ago, at which time he en- listed and went to France with an engineering corps, calls our attention to a letter from the gentleman which recently appeared in the Oregon Jour- nal. Mr. Ruddick, who well known and well liked in this commun ity, as was also bis family, was re ported to have been killed some time ago while on duty, but this rumor proved to be erroneous. He is still on terra firma, although since then be bas had narrow escapes, as the follow ing excrepts from his letter to a sister in Portland will show: "My duty as engineer has kept me close to tbe front. Whenever ground is captured from the Germans, details from the surveying department of the engineers are sent forward to report on the construction of the rail supply lines. While engaged in running lines with a small squad of soldiers, a Ger man gunner got our range and put a shell within a few yards of us. Four of the squad were instantly killed, myself and one of the privates escap ing. A little later, while working at night in dim moonlight, a German sharpshooter put two shots in at me before I could , get under cover, one shot striking my wrist watch, tearing it to pieces and cutting the strap from my wrist. The other shot went through my blouse. So frequent are narrow escapes that little attention is paid to them. "I have just come back from Bel gium. I was sent there with a party of ten men to make surveys, which took two. weeks to complete. I am not at all sorry to be back. The work was necessarily close up, the end of the survey ending less than one-quarter of a mile from tbe front trenches, and Belgium never was, during tbe war, any place for a man who likes peace, quiet and a long life. “This fortnight was moon time and the Hun planes used their opportunity for night work. No matter how steady are your nerves or bow phlegmatic your disposition, . this thing of dodg ing shells by day and trusting to Prov idence by night gets tiresome in tbe extreme. .Tbe detonstion of tbe bombs added to tbe constant racket of our air craft guns, which are kept constantly busy, added to tbe drumm ing of tbe machine guns on land, as well as in the air, makes sleep some what uneasy, quite apart from tbe thought that the next bomb may slight on the particular spot you are occupying. Four nights ago two planes were having a duel by moon- ligbs. Four of tbe machine gun bul- lets from one of tbe planescut through my tent near the top of the pole. I meditated about moving and ended up by going to sleep, which probably was the best plan. “fl Is no use to reiterate the wish that peace might oome, for 1 do noi want it to come until Germany is broken. I do think, however, it is about time I saw Daisy and my babies again, for I bale to think of them growing up and my not seeing them growing up. ' Little Minnie and "Old Soldier”. won’t recognize me when they see me. Bernice will be no lon ger a child. Enid, too, bless bar hittle heart, will be grown out of my knowl edge. While I have never seen my ‘war baby,' who was born six months after my departure, still she is one of the family and I am anxious to see ber. How much I want to see my wife 1 cannot tell you, but when I think of heart aches to see the bome folks once more.” PUT THREE CENTS ; ON YOUR LETTERS Postmaster J. H. Young has recelv ed notification from the bead of the posteffice department at Washington, D. C., that the new letter postage law would become effective on the morning of Thursday, November 2. After that date it will require three cento on the ordinary letter to send it to outside city. 0 EVERY ONE CAN HELP EVERY ONE MUST HELP lions that should be of vitsi importance The big wind of Wednesday and to every parent in the stale. I would like io learn tbe public sentiment in Thursday subsided just in time, for LIBERTY LOAN BONDS are the best secured bonds on earth regard to placing over our children in vesterday morning could not be more and as good as money in your pocket. The following business the public schools teachers who persist ideal for the opening of Hermiston’s firms of Hermiston will accept them at any time in the future at in calling the pupils liars and other annusi fall festival. Everything was Conditions for ths Increase of the their face value, either for merchandise or to apply on account. names, such aa slackersand I. W. W.’a. in readiness for ths big event, and the codlin moth bsve been very favorable This is tbs second year that a teach Dairy and Hog Show opened under Hermiston Produce & Supply Co. B S. Kingsley this year, and as a result many wormy er has been employed in the same auspicious and most favorable condi- Oregon Hsrdwsre & Implement Co. Hermiston Drug Company apples are being harvested. These school who makes a common and fre- lions. City Meat Market Phelps Cash Grocery wormy apples should be fed or pressed Clean-up week served to pul an up- quetil practice of calling her pupils Inland Empire Lumber Company Tum-A-Lum Lumber Company for cider to make vinegar to prevent liara. She does this in school hours to-date appearance to the community, The time limit is up October 27 th. their being lost, and to diminish the and in the presence of the entire and the removal of amali rock from over wintering moths. school. She recently accused a child Main street by the business men If you desire to invest your future savings in bonds sod in that If the worms in fallen and cull in the 7th. grade, of lying, in the helped wonderfully. way "do your bit," we will lake your application and allow you apples are not destroyed by feeding or visi- presence of the whole school, although - E rly trains brought in a to pay as follow.: For each $50 bond, $5 00 with your applica- pressing the apples within a short tore from outside points, and there is ample proof that the child did tion and $5.00 per month, the deferred payments at 6 per cent time they will crawl out and pupate not lie or. misrepresent to her io the ones were pretty well filled, interest. Under the above conditions there is not an adult per for the winter, and come out in the smallest degree che metter in ques pected that trains today from both son that cannot buy at least a 850.00 bond. east and west will be the means of spring in great numbers to affect next tion. COME IN AT ONCE AND MAKE YOUR SUBSCRIPTION year's crop. The number of eggs laid I should like to know if public sen conveying large delegations. The cattle, hogs and everything influences to a measurable extent the timent considers such a woman a lit number of wormy apples that will be example to place before little children else on exhibition lauf the finest, and found under ideal conditions of spray in th school room? Is it an incentive there is little doubt of the fair proving ing for their control and where great to truthfulness to 2be frequently and one of the most successful aver held in numbers of moths pass the winter, OF HERMISTON publicly denounced as liars? One Hermiston. unsprayed or poorly sprayed, orchards mother told me she did not like the have a very poor chance to mature names her children heti been celled in Fairfield of Pomeroy, Wash., and school, but we could not help it; If we any fruit. All who are watching the Walter Lloyd of thia project. progress of the moth in this section made a fuss it only made it harder for will have noticed that its prevalence Mrs. Walter Lloyd baa returned from the children. Shall such conditions as SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE has spread rapidly, and that previous Garfield, Wash., being called on ac this, continue in our sehoo s? The to the present year many apples Mr. Sylvester from Portland arrived count of the death of Mr Lloyd’s lews of Oregon compel us (and rightly A family of five, Including two matured without being sprayed. The Wednesday to visit a few days with bis father. too) to send our children to the public adults snd three children undor 12 number of wormy apples In unsprayed daughter Mrs. M. B. Murchie. There will be no more Red Cross schools. Cannot those lews be depended yesrs of age, under ordinary living and poorly sprayed orchards this E. E. Graham is on the sick list this meetings at the Phipps home as it bas upon to protect them in these schools? conditions, should bsve stored for each season was great, while it is not ser been decided tbst it would be more If not, why not? I have lived in states month of the winter season the follow in which so flagrant a breach of com ing food supplies: 1 bushel of Irish ious in the well sprayed orchards, of Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Pearson snd son convenient to have those that wanted which there is a comparatively small William were dinner guests st the Red Cross work to call for it in tbe mon courtesy and such unladylike be- potatoes, i bushel of other root vege number as yet. balcony of tbe drug store. In this way bavior on the part of a teacher in the tables such ss csrrots, turnips and Thompson home Mondsy evening. Begin now to protect next year's those desiring to take work bome can presence of her pupils would have parsnips; 25 qusrt cans of other vege- Ray Robinson bas as his guest bis canceled her certificate. tables, and 20 quarts of canned fruii apple crop by preventing the over- do so. father G. E. Robinson from Aberdeen. There is still another question I and preserves. These figures sre based wintering of this year’s crop of codlin Messrs. Reid, Barham, Sommerer While here be is staying at the E. E. wish to bring before the public The on estimates by tbe United States de- moth, is the advice of Superintendent and McKeen are among those that con Graham home. woman above refered to is trying to parlment of agriculture, which adds Allen of the local experiment farm. Geo. Beddow left Monday for a short tracted their apples and are having keep house, minister to the wants of an that most of this should come frees them hauled to the packing house. visit in Pendleton. ablebodied husband, raise a family, the perishable products of the many Mr. and Mrs. Tilton hsve rented the help conduct a ranch and keep school, bome gardens of this year. Howard Bailey leit Wednesday for With these figures as a basis, it is the Preaido in San Francisc, after Barham bouse and will occupy it about all at the same time— and our coun Nov. 1. try schools are flooded with thia cla a thought that si most any family may spending his furlough at the Leathers of married teachers. In the five yesrs calculate its requirements, taking into home. that I have patronized the country consideration tbe length of tbe winter Mrs. Wallace Spencer arrived home Unless we have rains of some con- schools we hsve had none but mar season In any given locality. Thus, ia last Saturday from Pendleton where sequence before cold weather occurs ried teachers. And every one of them tbs South, where food crops may be orchard trees and alfalfa on coarse she has been visiting friends the past Kept bouse, doing all their own work, grown In the fall, the winter allowance soils are liable to injury from freez month. besides entertaining and fulfilling their may be lesa than for tbe far North, Mr. Akers arrived home from W asco Alonzo Ghent is about to secure s ing. Last winter a few trees were where one must count on supplies for obligations to society. killed by freezing and several fields of Wednesday to be with bis family for pstent for an invention which will And very often to the above outside severs! months longer. probably bring him a million dollars alfalfa were thinned out to consider the Dairy Show. There is still time, says ibs depart ardous tasks is added the physical able extent in places, says R. W. Mr. and Mrs. Leathers were guests or more. Ghent does not tske nervous strain incident to motherhood ment, for a final drive in canning, pre Allen, superintendent of the Umatilla of Agnes and Ada Soneson Tuesday very kindly to the dry conditions and for which the hapless pupils have serving snd drying In using dried of the state and has figured out a experiment farm located near this night. to pay the price. They are often vegetables, it msy be assumed that a city. Mrs. Waller Sr. mother of Mrs. plan to alleviate the thirst of bis forced to resign in the middle of s given quantity of dried vegetables to Trees and alfalfa planto in dry Phipps has been very ill this past Helix friends. Says when be gets re term when al! the best teachers are equal lo four times its bulk of canned turns from his pstent be will purcbsse already employed. And they never do vegetable: that Is, one-fourth ef a ground suffer more from cold weather a flying machine He will make occa resign when they should. than those in wot soil do. Loss in quart of dry string beans when soaked Mrs. Sellers, Bernard, Dean, Charles this vicinity has occurred only in very and Amos motored with Raymond sional trips to California or Montsns, In tbe Isst three years tn nearbv over night is approximately equal to load on a barrel of whisky, then fly coarse soils, particularly places that Brassfield to Pendleton last Saturday over Helix, at sufficient altitude to schools I knew of one teacher closing one quart canned. hsve been heavily graded. her school the first of Juno ard pro returning Sunday. While in Pendle- evade the dry squad. He will have a senting her family with an Increase in Coarse soils that have not been irri ton Mrs. Sellers waa a guest of Mrs. hose attached to the barrel. When July. Anotbsr resigned her position gated for several weeks are becoming F. D. Marple. you bear bis trumpet call, rush out «be first of Jsnusry snd gsve to the quite dry. Such land, whore devoted The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. with your tin cups, pails, etc , con to orchards and alfalfa should be irri on the sick nect with the hose and, if you are family another member the first of gated as a safeguard against loos from Jack Waller is reported April. Still another closed her school right, Alonso will turn on the juice, the last of Juno and another little one freezing, which i liable to occur if list. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Sommerer left No doubt Ghent’s initial relief trip was added to the borne the first of tbe drouth continues into cold Morgan O’Connell Friday evening of Sunday for a ten days visit in the will attract the largest crowd ever weather. Irrigation will not stimu- October. last week in honor of the Freshmen late growth now as the weather is too Rose City. They went down via boat, assembled here.—Judge Garrett in I could fill pages of occurences of class in the local high school, of which leaving Umatilla Sunday at 8 a. m. Helix Advocate. this kind, and tbe troubles resulting he is a member. Many interesting cool. Henry Knots is building a chimney from them, tbst hsve fallen under my games wore plsyed, which together for the Akers bouse this week. personal observation, some of them too with a nice luncheon, served to past a disgusting for publication. But the very pleasant evening. Miss Magruder Mrs J. C. Barham, Emma Barham three examples given, of the last three of the school staff, Miss Skinner and and Childs expect to leave the first of years, two of them in the sams school, Mrs. O'Connell tastefully decorated the week for a visit to their old bome will sufice. the rooms for the occasion, and the in Erie, Pa. While east Mrs. Barbsm I am perfectly well aware that 1 two first nsmed young ladles later FICTION The Hermiston Herald, which has will consult a foot specialist In behalf have bandied a delicate subject with acted as chaperones to the youngsters at Adams, Unspeakable Perk. been located In the Williams building of Childs foot which has caused him unpardonable frankness, but the deplor- a bonfire wiener roast in the vicinity of Allen, Mettle of the pasture. for nearly three years, is at last much trouble the psst year. able condition of our sbhools under East Gladys street. Several Seniore Brown, Meadow grass. occupying the building especially de W. T Sellers has traded bls ranch the care of these over burdened mar- apnea red, but they offered no violence, Cable, Gideon’s band. signed for it by the owner. It is in this section to Mr. Williams of ried teachers compels ms to present and the party concluded its festivities Daviess, Miss Selina Lae. located on East Main street and al Banks, Oregon. The trade is an even the subject without varnish. shortly after midnight In a happy Deland, Iron woman. most directly opposite the Jewelry Shall we etili continue to lei a few frame of mind. Fox, Little shepherd of Kingdom store operated by City Recorder Jen- tract. Ws all regrec very much to sympathetic school officials make in loose Mr and Mrs. Sellers and family Come. French, Susan Clegg and ber love stitut ions of charity of our public The structure is 18x40 feet in dimen- as Mr. Sellers has been considered one schools in order that a few misguided affairs. of our most progressive ranchers. He wives msy support their delinquent Hough, Magnificent adventure. tion. It in finished in metal lath has been very prominent in church husbands on tbe public school fund or Knibbe, Sundown Slim. stucco on the outside, which gives it a work and the community regret very shall the school patrons and the tax Lincoln, Rise of Roscoe Paine. rather neat appearance. The con- much at their leaving. Mr. and Mrs payers say by ballot that a young mar Locke, Samaritan Msry. tractors were Boynton & Longhorn Williams expect to occupy their new Potato digging on tbs ranch of ried woman who Ie living with an McCarthy, Flower of France. who constructed all of the building P. P. Sullivan a short distance south able bodied mao and bringing upa Msber, Shepherd of tbe north. with the exception of the stucco and family of young children shall not be of Hermiston Is in progress this week, Mr. Culter from Hidaway was a Miller, House of toys sod the five sore patch Is yielding far employed in the public schools. Morris, When my ship comes Io. guest at the Frank Beddow home a fe" Henry Ou. Very few country children ever have beyond expectations. The tubers are Phillpott-, Three brothers. Altogether it makes a nice office an opportunity of going higher than Porter, Freckles. ing large enough to nearly fill a water the 8th grade. Shall school officials be Pratt, Ezekiel, bucket to a hili. Mrs. Simmons spent Fridsv and allowed to rob them of the benefit to Roberts, Heart of the ancient wood Saturday in Hermiston with her daugh- be derived from the few short school Robins, Florentins frame years that the etale of Oregon accords Wallace, Ben Hur. friends of The Herald to drop in and Mr. Lloyd, father of Waller Lloyd, them In order that this charitable en Wiggin, New chronicles cf Rebecca. died Saturday, Oct. 20, at the home of Wiggin, Rebecca of Sunoybrook terprise may still continue? Shall we died recently in Walla Walla, and let Oregon of whose standing among his daughter, Mrs. Roger Fairfield in farm. her sister states «e are so justly proud, Wilson, Bunker Bean. become delinquent in so vital a matter ALL WORMY APPLES SHOULD DE UTILIZED F irst N ational B ank STORE YOUR WINTER SUPPLIES COLUMDIA NEWS NOTES TDEES IN DRY SOIL LIABLE TO FREEZE “DRY SPELL” AT HELIX WILL DE DROKEN FRESHMAN CLASS HAD DIG MEETING HERMISTON BRANCH THE HERALD IS NOW IN ITS NEW HOME COUNTY LIBRARY PAT SULLIVAN DIGS DIG SPUDS COMMUNICATION dren, cartail this If you Will kindly permit me to use tbe ballot? to parties within the 6 Besides Both ad- koiting. his wife ho to public nuisance by May we bear from other parents on MRS F. B. PENNOCK. your valuable paver, I would ike.’ this subject.