The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, April 01, 1921, Image 6

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    THE
State Chamber Will Bring
Tourist Settlers to Oregon
HERMISTON
HERALD,
HERMISTON,
OREGON
Oregon Dairymen’s League
:: Marketing Agreement ::
The Oregon Dairymen’s Coopera-I the public; and any proportionate ex-
-
--------------
---------— —i penses connected therewith shall be
tive League,
a nonprofit,
Cooperative
Association, with its principal office deemed marketing costs under Para­
at Portland, Oregon, hereinafter graph Five.
9. The dairyman furthur agrees
called the League, first party, and
the undersigned dairymen, second that the League shall borrow money
in its name for any purpose on the
party, agree:
by-products or on any warehouse re­
1. The dairyman is a member of
the League and is helping to carry ceipts or on any accounts for the sale
out the express aims of the League of milk or cream or by-products, or
for cooperative marketing, for elim­ on any commercial paper delivered
inating speculation and waste- and thereof. The League shall pro-rate
for stablizing food markets in the in­ the money so received among the
terests of the dairymen and the pub­ dairymen according to the district
lic, by this and similar obligations pools and pay to each dairyman his
proportionate amount thereof.
undertaken by other dairymen.
10. The League may establish
2. The League agrees to buy and
selling
offices, manufacturing plants,
the dairyman agrees to sell and de-
liver to the League all of the mill or marketing or other agencies in any
cream produced by or for him. place.
11. The dairyman shall have the
in Oregon or at any place trib-
utary to Portland, during the right to close his dairy at any time
years 1920 (after date hereof,) 1921, in his free discretion; but if he pro­
duces any milk, or acquires or owns
1922, 1923, 1924, 1925.
The dairyman may retain milk for an interest in any, during the term
home, farm, or local consumption, or hereof, it shall all be included under
for retail distribution to consumers. the terms of this agreement and must
be sold only to the League.
3. The dairyman expressly war-
12. This agreement shall be
arnts that he has not heretofore con­
tracted to sell, market, consign or de­ binding upon the dairyman during
liver any of his milk or cream to any the period above mentioned as long
person, firm or corporation, except as as he produces milk or cream, direct­
noted at the end of this agreement. ly or indirectly, or has the legal
Any milk or dairy products covered right to exercise ownership or con­
by such a contract shall be excluded trol of any commercial milk or cream
from the terms hereof for the period or any interest therein or of any
dairy cows during the term of this
and to the extent noted.
contract.
4. (a) All milk or cream shall be
13. From time to time, the dairy-
delivered to the order of the League,
"ate.
man will mail to the League any
as
when
and
where
directed
by
the
It is believed that a party of at
statistical data requested on the
League.
least 500 prospective settlers could
forms provided for that purpose by
(b)
Any
deduction
or
allowance
be grouped together In this way and
the
League.
or
loss
that
the
League
may
make
brought to Oregon- in a body. De­
14. This agreement is one of a
or suffer on account of inferior grade
finite assurances have been given by
quality or condition at delivery, shall series generally similar in terms,
the railroads that they will cooperate
be charged against the dairyman in­ comprising, with all such agreements
in every way with the proposed plan.
signed by individual dairymen, one
dividually.
Homeseekers rates which were sus­
(c) The League may make rules single contract between the League
pended during the war were put in­
and regulations and provide inspect­ and the said dairymen, mutually and
to effect again last Tuesday follow-
ors to standardize the quality, meth­ Individually obligated under all of
ing a conference of railroad officials
od and manner of handling and ship­ the terms thereof. The League
at Oniah. Wm. McMurray, General
ping such milk and the dairyman shall be deemed to be acting in its
Passenger Agent of the Union Pacif­
agrees
to observe and perform any own name, for all such dairymen in
ic lines, wired from Omaha on that
such
rules
and regulations prescrib­ any action or legal proceeding on or
date, Informing the State Chamber
ed by the League and to accept the arising out of this contract.
that the Union Pacific would cooper­
grading established by the State and
15. The dairyman hereby exprès
ate in every way possible in the pro­
Federal authorities and the League. sly authorizes the League to deliver
posed plan and that the homeseekers
5. The League agrees to resell to the Oregon Dairymen’s By-pro­
rates had been put Into effect on the
such
milk or cream, or the by-pro­ ducts Corporation any or all of his
Union Pacific Lines serving Oregon.
ducts manufactured therefrom; to­ milk or cream for handling, process­
Taking advantage of these rates,
gether with milk or cream or by-pro­ ing, manufacturing into by-products,
which permits of stop-overs on any
ducts of like variety and grade, de­ or under an obligation to pay all
point enroute, the party of home-
liver by other dairymen under simi­ proportionate costs of such services
seekers would arrive in Oregon, the
lar contracts, at the best prices ob­ and the retirement of 20 per cent
rail trip coming to an end at the
tainable under market conditions; of the preferred stock annually be­
that
advantageous point. From
and
to pay over the net amounts re- ginning with 1921 and the 7 per cent
tour
point a personally conducted
ceived therefrom as payment in full dividend of all outstanding perferred
over the entire state by automobile
to the dairyman or dairymen named stock, such other costs, charges or
would begin.
In contracts generally similar to this advances and on such terms and con-
The routing of the party through
contract,
according to the value of ditions as the League may deem ad-
the state would be in the hands of a
the milk or cream delivered by each vantageous and profitable to the
committee from the State Chamber
of the dairymen, after deducting, dairyman.
This committee would enable the set­
therefrom the cost of maintaining
tlers to investigate the wool and the
16. (a) If the League brings any
the association and of haundling,
wheat growing sections, Irrigated
action whatever by reason of a
grading and marketing such milk
lands, fruit districts, and all the ag­
breach hereof, the dairyman agrees
or cream or by-products; and also
ricultural and industrial resources
to pay to the League all costs of
reserves for advertising, credits and court, costs for bonds and otherwise,
of the state. Great care would be
other general commercial purposes, expenses of travel and all expenses
used In selecting this Itinerary, so
said reserves not to exceed one per
arising out of or caused by the liti­
cent of the gross resale price, within gation and any reasonable attorney's
the discretion of the League.
fee expanded or incurred by it in
6. The League shall, for all pur- such proceedings; and all such costs
poses here, pool or mingle milk or and expenses shall be included In the
cream of the dairyman with milk or judgement and shall be entitled to
cream of a like grade from the same the benefit of any lien securing any
districts, delivered by other dairymen
payment hereunder.
named in contracts generally similar
(b) Inasmuch as the remedy at
to this contract. The dairyman
law would be inadequate and inas­
agrees that his milk or cream or pro­ much as it is now and ever will be
ducts thereof may be so mingled and impracticable and. extremely diffi­
that the returns therefrom, less all
cult to determine the actual damage
costs, advances and charges shall be
(Copy for This Department Supplied by the American Legion News Service >
resulting to the League, should the
credited and paid to him on a pro­ dairyman fall so to sell and deliver
portional basis out of the receipts
ARIZONA CITIZENS ERECT LEGION HOSPITAL IN RECORD TIME from the sale, marketing or other dis­ all of his cream, the dairyman here­
by agrees to pay to the League for all
posals of all such milk or cream of milk or cream delivered, sold, con­
like grade, or of the by-products
signed or marketed by or for him
therefrom, each pool to be for a cal­
other than in accordance with the
endar month, payment to be made terms, hereof, the sum of 5 cents per
monthly for whole milk or cream and gallon as liquidated damages for the
as and when determined by the breach of this contract, all parties
League, for by-products therefrom. agreeing that this contract is one
g
7. The dairyman expressly agree
of a series dependent for ita true val­
that the League may handle In its ue upon the adherence of each and
discretion some of the milk or cream all of the contracting parties to each
In one way and some in another; and
and all of the said contracts.
may manufacture into by-products
(c) The dairyman agrees that In
such amounts of milk, cream and
the event of a breach by him of the
products
as
the
League
may
milk
provisions hereof, regarding deliv-
deem proper, but the net proceeds of
ery
of milk or cream, the League
all milk, cream and milk products of
like variety from the same districts, shall be entitled to an injunction to
less all charges. shall be divided rat­ prevent furthur breachhereof. and
able among the dairymen in propor­ to a decree for specific performance
tion to their deliveries to each pool hereof; and the parties agree that
Such distribution shall be made from this is a contract for the purchase
time to time, in such amounts as the and sale of personal property under
special circumstances and conditions
League may deem advisable, until all
the accounts are completely settled and that the buyer cannot go into
8. The League may sell the said the open markets snd buy milk or
milk or cream or the by-products cream to replace any which dairyman
therefrom within or without this may fail to deliver.
17. The parties agree that there
state, at such time and upon such
conditions and terms as It may deem are no real or other conditions, prom-
fair and advisable and it may sell all I sm covenants, representations or in­
No. 1,—Part of Army of Volunteer Workmen, 8,000 Strong. No. 2.—Gov. or any part of the milk an cream ducements in addition to or at var-
•mor Campbell at Wheel of State Highway Truck, Hauling Material and products to any agency for the co- lance with any of the terms hereof,
Workmen. No. 3.—Governor Campbell Wearing Overalls That Later Brought operative marketing of the milk pro­ und that this agreement represents
$200 for Post Park Red Cross Fund. No.
Left to Right: O. C. Parker,
ducts of the Pacific Coast or of other the voluntary and clear understand­
Mayor of Tucson; Bert H. Clingan, Commander Department of Arizona, Amer
ing of both parties fully and com­
lean Legion; E. J. Winslett, National Vice Commander, American Legion. states or group of states and under
joint interests of the dairymen and pletely.
ensive and far reaching
ng settlers to Ore-
f lesa Ie scale from the
n i lutes during the
er was announced by
tate Chamber of Com-
y following an all-af-
3 of the Executive
. t. e Oregon Building,
i, which has been "in the
for several months, includ-
es I
- ting of hundreds of home-
seeLers to Oregon in a body and a
personally conducted tour by auto-
es over the entire state.
he State Chamber of Commerce
will devote its entire energy and re-
sources to the task of putting thi
plan through effectively during the
c ting spring and summer, it wa.
announced yesterday.
Briefly, the program adopted hj
the Board of Directors is as follows:
1 arly this spring, agents will be sent
to canvass the middle western states
including the Dakotas, Iowa, Kansas.
Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Mon­
tana and Utah, for the purpose of in-
ici viewing prospective Immigrants
who ate contemplating a move west­
ward. Advices recieved by the state
Chamber during the past few months
Indicate that this westward move
nient will be on a larger scale this
summer than in former years, and
these advance agents will gather to-
gether a large group to move to Ore-
gen on a fixed schedule and a certain
that every representative district of
the entire state would be covered by
the party In the shortest space of
time consistent with a thorough in
vestlgation.
"The principal object of the trip
is to show the middle western farm­
er what can be raised in Oregon,” ac­
cording to Secretary Quayle’s report,
"The cheapness and fertility of the
'and and the potential resources of
the state in general. One of the
duties of the advance agents operat
ing in the middle west would be t
find out from each prospective set­
tler exactly the part of the state in
which he is interested and he will be
liverted to that locality.
"Different commercial organiza-
Hons throughout the state will ap
cint committees who will secure the
specific tracts of land for sale on ap
praised values based on crop produe-
tion.
"The party would be made up, not
only of farmers, but bankers and bus­
iness men who would be interested
In the industrial as well as the ag­
ricultural possibilities of the state.
To those who are interested primar­
ily in the industrial as well as
the agricultural possibilities, many
sections of the state would have a
great appeal. The cheapness of the
water power and the resources await­
ing development would be impressed
upon them.
"Upon arrival in Oregon the par­
ty would be entertained by the vari­
ous commerical organizations along
the route. Advance preparations
would be made for their reception
and each community would endeavor
to impress the visitors with the at­
ti actions they have to offer. Date
will be compiled relative to all
branches of the state’s resources, es­
pecially in regard to the possibilities
of the various communities through
which the party will be shown.
“Many settlers from the middle
west have been placed in Oregon
through correspondence. Hundreds
are preparing to move westward with
the coming of summer. By group­
ing them together, under the direc
tion and care of representatives of
the State Chamber and with all ar­
rangements for their entertainment
made in advance and assured of a
royal welcome along the route, it is
believed that a large number of sub­
stantial citizens can be added to the
state.”
In addition to the cooperation of
the railroads, which has already
been assured, the cooperation of var­
ious organizations and associations
including the newly formed Oregon
Tourist Bureau, the Farm Bureau,
the Oregon State Motor Association
the Wool Growers and Fruit Growers
Associations and the directors of the
1925 Exposition is expected.
A. L. Tetti, president of the Oregon
State Motor Association, stated that
the proposed plan would be backed
by his organization “to the limit.”
The AMERICAN LICION
ALONG
THE LINE
•F MARCH
WW””
raen
eroy"
WITH THE
NATIONAL
SERVICE MEN
Mr
(1.
aus
wall
Notice of Sheriff’s Sale Under Ex­
ecution
Notice is hereby given that by
virtue of an execution issued out of
the Circuit Court, State of Oregon,
for Umatilla County, and to me di­
rected and delivered, upon the Judg­
ment and decree rendered and enter­
ed in said Court of the 11th day of
March. 1921, in favor of F. B.
Swayze and W. H. Simpson as Re­
ceivers of the Western Land & Ir­
rigation Company, a corporation,
Plaintiff and against Frank A. Wood
as Defendant, for the sum of *60.00
with interest thereon at the rate of
6 per cent per annum from June 1st
1921,and for *11.95 cost and dis­
bursements, which said decree, judg­
ment, and order of sale has been
docketed and enrolled in the office of
the Clerk of said Circuit Court; and
whereas by said judgment, decree
and order of sale it was directed
that the following described real
property in Umatilla County, Oregon,
to-wit:
West half of the East half of the
Northwest quarter of the Northeast
quarter of Section 17, Township 4,
North of Range 28, E. W. M„ to­
gether with the water right, of 10
miners inches of water appurtenant
thereto as specified in the contract
between the Western Land and Ir­
rigation Co. and Frank A. Wood
dated February 15, 1916, be sold by
the Sheriff of Umatilla County, Ore­
gon, to satisfy said judgment and
Decree and all costs;
I will on the 18th day of April,
A. D., 1921, at the hour of 10 o’clock
in the forenoon of said day at the
North door of the Court House in
Pendleton, Umatilla County, Oregon,
sell the right, title and interest the
said Frank A. Wood, had in and to
the above described property on the
11th day of March, A. D., 1921, or
since then has acquired, at public
auction to the highest bidder for
cash in hand, the proceeds to be ap­
plied in satisfaction of said execua-
tion and all costs.
Dated this 11th day of March, A.
D. 1921.
Zoeth Houser, Sheriff.
By E. F. B. Ridgeway, Deputy.
27-5tc
Call For Bids
Notice is hereby given that sealed
bids will be received at the office of
the City Recorder of Umatilla, Uma­
tilla County, Oregon, up to and in­
cluding five o’clock in the afternoon
on the 18th day of April, 1921, for
the improvement of that portion of
Third street lying and being between
the center of "A” street and the
East line of “F” street, in said city
of Umatilla, Umatilla County, Ore­
gon, in accordance with the plans
and specifications of such improve-
ment prepared by E. I. Davis, City
Engineer, and now on file in the of-
fice of the Recorder of said City,
where the same may be examined.
Each bid must be accompanied by a
certified check for 5 per cent of the
sum bid, made payable to the Mayor
of the City of Umatilla, to be re­
turned to the bidder, if unsuccess­
ful, and to be forfeited to the City of
Umatilla if the bid is successful and
bidder falls to enter into the con­
tract in accordance with the terms
of his bid and of the ordinances and
resolutions covering such improve­
ment.
The City Council reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.
. Dated March 16th, 1921.
"
E. McKenzie,
City Recorder.
27-4tc
BUTTER WRAPPERS
Printed to Your Order
Pendleton and
Umatilla Stage
Schedule and Ratee in effect
March 15, 1921
Lv. Hermiston for Pendleton:
7:50 a. m.; 12:20 p. m.
2:20 p. m.
Lv. Hermiston for Umatilla:
9:55a. m.; 12:55p. m.
5:10 p. m.
FARES
Pendleton to Umatilla, $2.15
Station at Hotel Oregon and
Hotel Hermiston
Are You Going
to Build?
If so let me figure with you.
I will help you design your builnings
and make your plana and specifications
free of charge.
Drop a card to
I. N. Hartsook, Hermiston
Real Estate,
Loans,
Insurance,
Investments
Land and City Property :
Bought, Sold, Rented, Exchang-
ed and improved.
Insurance-
strong American companies
insuring against fire. The best
Western companies. Correct ratea.
Experienced business attention as-
surred.
Loans--
Agency for Union Savings A
Loan Association of Portland.
Investment., Excellent rate of
interest on money, protected by
State deposit of securities.
Loans on improved city proper­
ty. Can let you have money to
build.
Investments:
If you want to buy, advise with
us as to safe investment. We
know values, soils, water rights
and possibilities of success, Can
direct you right.
We hold state license to do
business and are under bond for
honest dealing. Whatever we
present we will stand by.
E. P. DODD
THE HERALD OFFICE
Hermiston, Oregon
SPRING 1921
A New Store--
Fresh New Goods—
New Low Prices
E hope you will come to
our opening on Satur­
day, April 2, if only to
look. We want you to
know our store. All our
stock is fresh and ‘ new,
higher quality and lower
prices than you have been
offered since 1914.
Complete line of Women’s and Children’s Wear,
Dry Goods and kindred lines of merit and real
quality at lowest cash prices.
W
The Crescent Dry Goods Co
Pendleton, Oregon
WELDING VULCANIZING
Machine Shop Work
Ewkanre:
FLOYD KNERR
Ore. Hdwe. Co.