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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1921)
Uhe Hermintu Heraln te VOL XV HERMISTON, COMMERCIAL CLUB ELECT - OFFICERS At the regular Tuesday luncheon the Commercial club held a good meeting and the annual election of officers took place. This did not cause much commotion, and very lit tle time, as M. D. Scroggs made a motion that all the present incum bents be retained and asked the sec retary to cast a unanimous ballot for all. The motion was quickly second ed, and as Mr. Dodd rose to protest, Mr. Scroggs put the motion to the members, and before anyone knew what was happening, the old of ficers were re-elected. The work accomplished during the last year has been so well handled that th a old officers were drafted in to service for another year, and were not allowed to protest. The members of the club realize that a great deal of work and time needs be given to the management of the club, and all are grateful for the services perfor med by the officers, and are confi dent that the new year will bring forth new and added assets to our town and country through the activ ities of the club. The officers are: E. P. Dodd, president; F. B. Swayze, vice-president; F. V. Prime, secre- tary-treasurer. C. W. Kellogg, chairman of the railroad committee reported that the O. W. R. & N. have made arrange- menta with the city to have the night watchman open the depot at night and see that there is a fire in the stove for the midnight train. A committee was appointed to ar range for an entertainment for the visiting ladies who will be here while the Farm Bureau meets the latter part of this month. The committee is, O. G. Sapper, H. E. Hitt, and Joe Ralph. Baptist Church REALESTATE TRANSACTION * EXCHANGES 20 ACRES * ′ A. L. Benefiel. of Odel, Oregon ′ arrived in Hermiston last week ’ and looked over the project for a place to buy. After carefully going over the territory, he pur- ' chased 20 acres from Mrs. Ross ' Lawson, just outside the city 1 limits. ' Mr. Benefiel returned to his ' home Tuesday after the deal had . been closed and will return in the near future to cultivate the ′ farm. The transaction was handled by the E. P. Dodd Agency. * • * * • • » • * • * * • • • A Robertson-Cole feature, starring H. B. Warner in “The Gray Wolfs Ghost” will be the attraction at the Play House Sunday night. Also a Fox Sunshine comedy. PENDLETON FIRM BUYS LAY’S GARAGE—WILL MOVE HERE Messrs. Neil and Barker of Pen dleton, who operate a garage east of that city's limits, have purchased the Lay’s Garage from Maxfieled and Rhodes Bros, The new owners took possession the first of January and will move all their machinery now located in their shop near Pendleton to the Hermiston shop. Col. Emmett Callahan from Board man was in Hermiston Tuesday. The motor license law has been extended till the 16th of January. However, you must have your re ceipt on your person when driving to show that you have made applica tion for a license, or you may get in to trouble. Demonstration Agent Coming Mrs. Edith Van Duesen, county home demonstration agent, will be in Hermiston to hold a sewing school on January 18th, 19th, and 20th, in the Library, both morning and after noon of each day. All the ladies know what good work was accomplished at the mil- linery school last year, The results of these schools save considerable money to the ladies, and all are anxious to take advantage of them. We are informed that this class will be limited, and those wishing to take advantage of it, should enroll at once with Mrs. F. C. McKenzie. For further particulars, watch for announcement in next weeks paper. Last Sunday was a red letter day to the Baptists of Hermiston. Rev. J. S. Reid, Baptist State Evangelist, and Rev. J. C. Austin, State Director of Educational Promotion work, held an all day Kingdom Conference, 11 a. m„ 3 p. m. and 7:30 p. m., and also the breaking of bread at the communion service. The fellowship lunch prepared by the ladies of the church, the inspiring talk by Dr. Reid to the young people at 6:45, all contributed their full quota to make It a day long to be remembered as SOCIETY EVENTS OF THE WEEK fraught with good things. The little folks of Mrs. F. P. Adams Bury Baby Son and Mrs. C. E. Schilling’s Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Mead of Heppner, School classes enjoyed a happy party Oregon, accompanied the body of given at the home of Mrs. Schilling their infant eon, Lee Irvin Mead, to last Thursday afternoon from two to Hermiston Monday. The baby was five o’clock. After a round of live born December 19, and died Decem ly games the hostesses treated the lit ber 31. Funeral services were held tle folks to dainty refreshments. at Heppner, January 1st by the Rev. Twenty-seven youngsters were pres Livingstone, assisted by his wile and ent. they left the following day for Her- Last week’s social calender Includ miston where interment was made in ed a number of informal gatherings the local cemetery. Mrs. Mead is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. McCoy for the college students who were home for the holidays, concluding or this city. Episcopal Services Rev. Paddock, Episcopal bishop of Eastern Oregon, will hold services Sunday morning. January 9th, at 11:00 o’clock in the Library. Every body welcome to these services. Cheap Building Material. The making of houses chiefly from alate waste, as proposed by north Wales builders, is an experiment of much interest. The waste has been accumulating in quarries for three centuries, and Is adapted for use in paints, putty, bricks, blocks, slabs, tiles, flooring, mortar, rubber and molded products, but hitherto the cost of manufacture seems to have kept it Tried n for roads, the slate has proven with a dancing party given in their honor by Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Leath ers at their pleasaant country home on Thursday evening. A refreshing luncheon was served by the hostess before the young people departed greatfully appreciative of a delight ful evening with a hearty ‘So long’ till we meet again. Most of the stud ents left Saturday evening for their respective schools. Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Fraser delight fully entertained at a progressive bridge party on Saturday evening. The rooms were prettily decorated, twenty-four guests enjoying the evening's entertainment, concluding with an appetising luncheon before the wee sms' hours of the next day. UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, California Alfalfa Growers Give Pointers on Association NO. 17 WEST END INVADES NEW COURT EARLY MORNING FIRE BURNS OFFICE ROOF Last Monday morning at about 7:30, fire was discovered in the roof of the Inland Empire Lumber company's office near the depot, The alarm was sounded and the fire company responded in qiuck time. Not- withstanding the fact that a high wind was blowing, the fire * was put out In a hurry, and ♦ good work done by the fire lad- * dies. • Had the blaze got a good start * with the high wind to fan it • along, there might have been a * blase that would have caused * considerable trouble. • The loss to the lumber com- * pany is between *400 and $500, * all covered with insurance. The • cause of the fire was declared ♦ to have been an overheated • stove. **••*••••• Two years ago there was a number of alfalfa growers' associations, op erating as Independent, separate or ganizations in different parts of Cal ifornia. While there was a certain bond of sympathy betwen thm in that an older association was always glad to extend advice and information to a group of growers in some other sec tion who were trying to organize, yet there was no systematic working agreement between them as a whole. Since that time, however, this con dition has been changed and eight associations, representing as many different districts, throughout the state of California, and now federat ed under the material wing of one central organization, known as the “Alfalfa Growers of California, Inc." whose present headquarters are lo cated at 408-10 Pacific Electric building in Los Angeles. The method of organization is as follows: In an alfalfa neighborhood or sec tion the association growers elect three to five trustees. These trust ees elect a chairman from among themselves. These various chairmen of a district elect a director to rep resent the local organization In tho central organization. The directors of the central association elect an executive committee. The executive committee employs a manager and his staff consisting of a salesman- ager, field man, accounting depart ment, etc. The manager and the ex ecutive committee look after the af fairs of the central association and this latter organization is the vehicle which consolidates the activities of the various local associations throu out the state. It keeps them in formed of market conditions and acts as a channel of distribution. Here is an example of the econm- ic waste that it prevents. At Fresno, two hundred and fifty miles north of Los Angeles, it was found that for merly during the heighth of the al falfa producing season there had been instances where some of the growers in order to get ready money had sold to Los Angeles dealers at a time when the price was at its low est ebb in summer. This hay was taken to Los Ángeles, then later when a shortage developed at Fresno, was shipped from Loe Angeles back to that point, sold to and consumed by dairymen within a short distance of where it was originally grown. You can be sure there was a wide difference between the low summer time price received for his hay by the hard-up farmer and the fancy figure that the dairyman was finally compelled to pay the following win ter. Into whose pockets did the dif ference go? In this case, the railroads were paid for hauling the alfalfa 500 need less miles and there was an expense of loading and unloading twice on board cars. In addition to this was the profit tacked on by the Los An geles dealer to cover his enterprise. The Central Growers’ association, being a state-wide organization, pre vents this economic inefficiency by informing themselves of the probable total production and consumption of alfalfa within the state for a year in advance. If they learn that the pro duction in one certain locality is like ly to be greater than the year's con sumption within that section, then they arrange to ship enough hay out of the district to ease the situation and place It in some section of the state where the estimates furnished by the field men of the staff show that local production is going to be insufficient. If necessary ths cen- trai association takes care of the tem porary financial needs of the grow- er and holds his hay for a time when it is more than probable that the demand right at home will con- sume the temporary surplus. ln this manner the central organi zation, with its wider scope of ac tion, performs a service of crop dis tribution for the collective associa tions that no one of them individual ly and alone would be able to accom plish. for itself. During the comparatively short time that the central association of alfalfa growers has been handling the marketing affairs of the feder ated district associations it has suc ceeded in stabilising the market so that tho growers have not had to part with their hay at less than the cost of production as have some of the farmers raising other products. During the present season of 1920, it has distributed 100,000 tons of al falfa for its members at an average pi ice of *26 per ton. There are approximately 1,600 growers within the California assoc iation at the present time, repre senting a little less than 50 per cent of those engaged in the alfalfa indus try within the state. The great good accomplished by the federated assoc iation is now being realized by the farmers and it is expected that when the season opens next spring that at least 75 per cent of the growers throuout the state will be members of the organization. The method of financing is as fol lows: A new member pays *2.00 per acre as an entrance fee, the amount to be deducted from his first sale of al falfa. A general fund Is provided by each farmer signing a note for a cer tain agreed amount, say *5.00 per acre. These notes for the general fund are made to run for five years and, although of course each farmer stands behind his individual note, it is understood that it shall run a suf ficient length of time to permit the note being paid off by a sinking fund that is created by a tax of fifty cents on each ton of alfalfa sold. The notes are used as collateral and local banks will usually advance nearly one hundred per cent ou them. In this manner the association finances Itself with the least possible incon venience to its members. With the aid of this general fund it is possible for the organization to advance money to some of its mem bers at a period of the year when per haps a few hundred dollars would enable a grower to tide himself over without sacrificing his crop at a time when the supply is possibly greater than the immediate demand. This is the season of the year when the speculator usually gets in his work and reaps a middleman’s profit that should belong both to the pro ducer and the actual consumer. Nor does the said speculator confine hts activities to alfalfa alone, as all of us who hare ever engaged in the fanning business can truthfully tes- tify. There is a marketing charge of *2.00 per ton if the central associa tion has to ship the alfalfa out of a district. If a market is found local ly, a charge of *1.00 per ton is made to cover the expense of general ac- tivities. These amounts are saved to the farmer many times over by the ad vantage gained through having a state-wide guiding intelligence con trolled by himself that is always alert to protect his Interests. got.’ The guests then lined up for the grand march passing the refresh ment booth where a cafeteria lunch eon was served after which dancing was resumed until the notes of ‘Home Sweet Home' bade the merry makers a Happy New Year and Good Night. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Mathews of ped with a lighted birthday candle made an appetising celebration for West 714 Spoffard Avenue, Spokane. Washington, at one time ranchers the birthday of the new year. of the Umatilla project have just re- tur. ned to their home after spend- BUTTER CREEK NOTES Friends and relatives of Mr. and ing the Christmas holidays at the Mrs. C. H. Garnet gave them a sur hotel Sherman. Chicago, with their prise party last Tuesday evening. eon, C. M. Mathews, who Is on his Dancing and games were ien joyed Christmas furlough from the Great Practice Prayer. until a late hour after which ret- Lakes Naval Training Station. Af The mother was a bit puzzled by her ter the holidyas he will return to reshments were served. — —--------— hopeful’s insistence that the 5b."orexent when she said her Miss Vivian Nation and Lucile Great Lake, where he will resume Richards returned home Bunday af his studies ih the Naval Aviation | S2 "Why, Violet, are you tired of moth- ter spending the holidays with Miss Mechanical school there. He is now Richard's parenets at Condon. Ore half way through the school and re ers was her reproachful query. -No. mums,” answered her daugh- gon. Miss Richards is a student of ports the greateet possibilities for young mon In the aviation branch of ter loyally, "but I want Annie to be the Stanfield high school. around while I’m sayin’ ’em, cause the Naval Service. ■ last night I prayed for Ice cream for Christmas with Mrs. Shaw's mother, business I dessert and we had bread pudding. Thoma s Campbell mede a Mrs. Letha King at Weston. Mr. American Legion Weekly. and Mrs. C. J. Voliva accompanied trip to F’endleton last Monday. , The afternoon bridge club held its first meeting in new year at the home of Mrs. Harry Straw on Tuesday af ternoon with Mrs. H. M. Gunn and Mrs. Charles Baker as assistant host- esses An abundance of evergreen trees. Christmas bells and the Yule log burning in the big fire place fill- cheery room. About seventy-five couples enjoyed the dancing to good music by Fletcher's orchestra from holiday cheer. Auction bridge was Pendleton. The dawning new year played at six tables which were pret was heartily welcomed by the singing tily arranged for tea at five o'colck. of 'Should auld acquaintance be for- Ye old fashioned plum pudding top- The Library Ball given at the Bun galow Auditorium on New Year's eve ite macadam; and bricks made from it was more of a success socially than financially. The stage was banked sistant to water absorption as other with evergreens and holiday greenery bricks. Good drain pipes have been waa tastefully arranged about the JANUARY, 7, 1921. About 26 citizens from the west end of Umatilla county, invaded the new county court last Wednesday in the Interests of the Butter Creek road. At a big meeting held recently at Pine City when all the west end com mercial clubs sent delegates, it was decided that all the clubs should send representatives (o wait on the county court and ask fur money to build the road from the Morrow county line down through Butter creek to Umatilla. Delegates also THE TOLL GATE” IS FIRST RELEASE OF HART COMPANY were asked to Interview the Morrow I county court. The southwestern frontier in the The west end cities including olden, golden days is the scene of Echo, Stanfield, Hermiston and Uma- William S. Hart's new picture. “The tilla, and the Butter creek road dis- Toll Gate. It Is the first of the big I trict, all sent delegates to meet with productions made by Mr. Hart’s own the Umatilla county court Wednes- company under his own supervision day. Thomas Campbell, F. B. to be released by Paramount Art- Swayze, E P. Dodd, and M D. craft. The Play House will show the Seroggs were the delegates repre- picture Saturday, January 8th. senting the Hermiston Commercial “The Toll Gate” is an impressive club; from the Umatilla club, W. J. drama of self-sacrifice and red-blood- Dobler w T. Roberts, Carl Brow- ed manhood as well as a glowing plc- nen and I O. Thompson were sent ; ture of the west that has passed the Butter creek road district was away. Mr. Hart is supported by n represented by Allen Thompson. Bob capable company headed by beautiful Lewis and R R Lewis. Anna Nilsson. His remarkably in-The county court was very con- telligent Pinto pony figures prom-1 siderate, and desirous of meeting the inently in the big scenes. | requests of the delegates from our sections, and promised results as soon as finances would permit. The census of opinion from the del egates is very encouraging, all be lieving that good work was accom plished, and that the ney county The Shotwell Contracting company court will do all in its power to meet this week started work on the grad-1 with their requests. Grading Streets In City Limits Ing and improvment of two city streets. The first project is Main street extending east from Fourth where the Columbia Highway turns south and will consist of grading and graveling the full width of the street for one block, then the hard sur facing will narrow down to a 16 foot roadway continuing on east to the city limits about one-half mile. The other road will join the High way on the west side of the railroad track and extend from this point on west to the city limits. This road will be full width from the Highway inter-section and continue as such on Hermiston Avenue as far as the Cath olic church, when it will narrow to a 16 foot road until the western city limits are reached. The improvement costs are divided between the city an dthe property owners. The west road would be a probable link between the Butter Creek High way now under consideration, and the Columbia Highway. The east raod joins the Dingoni al road, the improvement of which will probably be undertaken this spring. them. Mrs. Shaw’s sister. Miss Mil dred returned home with them also to finish the remainder of the school term at the Westland school. Six new pupils have been register ed at the Wesetland school since the holidays. Miss Gladys Ware has been quite ill with la grippe the last few days. Miss M. E. Warren of Pendleton Is visiting her daughter, Mrs. D. H. Shaw. ONE TOUCH OF COLOR It is said that the only touch of col or at the first meeting of the first as- sembly of the League of Nations In Geneva was furnished by this courier for the Indian delegation. His pie- tureeque attire attracted much atten Bon. A Piscatorial Hypothesis. “Any fish In this river?" asked the city man. “The government stocked It with trout once.” replied the native. "Well, they won't come near a hook.” . — “They do seem smarter than other fish ” returned the old fellow. “I reck- on, maybe, they had to pass a civil service examination before the «ov ernment could employ 'em.”—Boston Transcript