Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1921)
QUEEN OF COTTON BALL. Mountain Light Is Like Aurora Fine Site of Woman’s Foundation Buildings Curious Electrical Display in ican continent as the Andes lightning. It appears as a silent but very lumi North Carolina Excites In nous discharge of electricity along the crest of the Cordillera Beal In Chile. I terest of Scientists. ONCE THOUGHT TO BE PHANTOM Suddenly and W ithout Warning Light Sometimes Blazes Out on Crest of Mountain, Moves Down Side and Fades O u t Washington, D. C.—“Tired profes- tors and business men who sought surcease from their sorrows In the mountainous regions of western North Carolina have during the past few summers given up some of tlielr much- needed hours of sleep to chase what most of them believed to be nothing more than a phantom, or the witch tires of some maker of mountain dew, but the Brown mountain light Is now coming Into Its own as an accredited electrical phenomenon,” says a bulle tin of the National Geographic so ciety, Issued from Its Washington, D. C„ headquarters. "Brown mountain lies 17 miles from Blowing Bock In the Blue mountains In the western part of the stute, and, though plainly visible from the resort, Is In nn uninhabited and sparsely wooded section. Suddenly and with out warning a light sometimes blazes out on the crest of the mountain, slow ly moves down Its side and then fades out; sometimes it seems to rise from the top of the mountain and hang sus pended In the air where It fudes. A W raith of Infinite Variety. In a region where thunderstorms are practically unknown. "Its visibility Is sometimes very marked, having been noted by the for- { mer director of the Meteorological and Geophysical institute of Chile, | while he was out ut sea, more than 800 miles from the head cordillera. | The actual discharge, In which the mountain acts as a lightning rod be tween the clouds and the earth, re sembles a glimmer, but sometimes the flashes which take place at the point of origin are strong und powerful, then gradually diminish In Intensity and finally disappear Into the night. The light flashes over the mountain from late spring to fall, and the dis plays grow less brilliant as one goes farther south. “The same phenomenon has also been noted In the Swiss alps. One observer, after a long period of hot and dry weather, reported that he had | seen a succession of semi-circular flashes which shot up from a moun Miss Eleanor Cameron of Waco, tain In the Bernese Oberlund, occa sionally lighting the Jungfrau group. Texas, In her "coronation robe,” as Such dlspluys are notable for their queen of the Texas cotton palace ex likeness In appearance to the aurora, position ball, an Internationally Im except that they do not reach such portant event In Waco. The robe wag modeled after a Seventeenth cen heights.” tury Spanish gown, and is vulued at $5,000. Third Boy Found Hanged In Barn. Chicago. — Anthony Szkolny, the Family Leaps From Fire. third boy to have been found hanged Danville, Ky.—Leaping from their here, was discovered suspended from a rope tied to a rafter In the barn front porch to the limbs of a tree In In the rear of Ills home. The body the yard, Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Hudson was found by a playmate. No reason and family escaped after flames had Is assigned for any of the suicides, as cut off the stairway. Mr. Hudson they have been pronounced by the leaped from the porch to the tree and police. bade the others follow him. “It has as many whims and moods ns a temperamental artist, sometimes appearing several times during one night, now stationary, now slow, again swift In Its flight, and sometimes It cannot be seen for a comparatively long period of time, but It usually Is most active when the sky Is clearing after a ruin. Those who have studied It In all Its guises say that It often is not unlike the stnr from a bursting sky-rocket, though much brighter, und that It Is sometimes red and sometimes yellow, due probably to the condition of the Omaha Sheriff Who Accommo atmosphere. dated One Applicant Is Del “Scientists were nt first prone to cavil at the stories which came out of uged With Letters. the mountains with the tourists, think ing perhaps that locomotive head lights or wily mountaineers were play ing tricks on active Imaginations, but toduy Dr. W. J. Humphreys, physicist of the United States weather bureau, and other meteorologists of note, be Lonely Ones of Both Sexes Eager for lieve that there occurs around the Spouses From the Plains— Letters mountain's crest a brush discharge of Come From Almost Every lightning, similar to the fnmous Andes State. lightning, or the St. Elmo's fire, which gave rise umong the ancient Greeks Omaha.—All the widows In New to the myth of Custor and Bollux. York and a lot in other states as That glow which accompanies the well seem to he hunting for Nebraska slow discharge of electricity to the husbands. And half the widowers in earth from the ntmosphere. In south New York and n lot In other states as ern climates, during thunderstorms, well seem to be on the lookout for seen on the tops of innsts, spires, or Nebraska wives. other pointed objects was named St. Sheriff Mike Clark of Omaha has Elmo's fire by sailors after one of about a bushel of letters on his desk. their patron saints, because they felt And the letters are rolling In on Sheriff thnt when the sign appeared they Clark nt the rate of about fifty every had nothing further to fenr from the day. Two mouths ago Sheriff Clark storm. found a husband for Widow IRinhnm Compared to Andes Display. of Newark, N. J., who had evolved the "Perhaps the most remarkable fea theory that all she had to do to get a ture of the electrical discharge which husband was to write to some Western takes place either from the earth to sheriff. She picked out Omaha. And the clouds or from the clouds to the sure enough. In shout three weeks she earth around Brown mountain Is thnt was married to Albert Henry Thomas, It Is silent. The same thing is true a railroad mnn of Omaha. of the electrical displays In the Andes, Her story got Into the newspapers— which have long been known to scien and Sheriff Clark thereby got his foot tists and travelers In the South Amer In I t For every widow around the Nebraska Mates in Big Demand SHOW TERSENESS AND SPEED I Deroulede Statue Unveiled in Metz M. Barthou, French minister of war. recently unveiled a statue of Paul Deroulede, the great French patriot at Meta. The big bell of the cathedral, which Is seldom used, as Its vibrations are believed to endanger the safety of the tower, was rung on this occasion. The statue stands on a pedestal built by the Germans for a monument to the Emperor Frederick III. country who read that story Immedi ately wrote Sheriff Clark for a hus band. And every widower and every old bachelor under whose notice the article came wrote the sheriff to find them wives among the hundreds of women who had written him for hus bands. Show Terseness and Speed. Mrs. S. Brlckley, 7 East Broadway, New York, wrote one of the shortest, rlght-to-the-point letters of them. “I am looking for a husband; can you do anything for me?" she asks the sheriff. James George, box 349, Mount Ver non, N. Y„ is also very laconic In his demands: “I want a w ife; put me In touch with on«, quick 1” he writes Sheriff Clark. Charles Olsen. 74 Woodhull street, Brooklyn, Is not quite so terse. His letter to the sheriff says: “I am a machinist, a former chief engineer on a Danish ship. I want a home again, but don't know n woman whom I can ask? Please send the names of several who want husbands.” Sheriff Clark sent him the names of half a dozen or so. Avery O. Wooden, 1228 I.nge avenue, Bochester, N. Y., writes the sheriff he Is twenty-seven years old and that he wants a young widow. Charles Ryan, Clifton Springs, N. Y., told the sheriff he Is a farmer, but that he has taken two years In a medi cal college and expects to complete his course. He wonts a wife. Peter Grub, box 270, Erie Railroad Y. M. C. A., Hoboken, N. J., says In his letter: “I see where you have lots of wives to give away. Give me one.” Thaddeus Stargeskl, 299 Waverly ave nue, Newark, N. J., Is delighted with the prospects. “Just rend the joyful news of an unlimited supply of let ters from females wanting husbands,” he writes Sheriff Clark. “I am a gradu ate electrician. Send me some letters.” Wants a Sensible Widow. "Your name sounds good to me,” Frank Ryan, 695 Lenox avenue. New York, wrote to Sheriff Clark. “I want a sensible widow." Charles F. McDonald, 283 West 147th street, New York, Is searching for an uncle who disappeared thirty-five years ago. The uncle's name was M. O. Connor. An estate In Ireland cannot be settled until he Is found. "Help me find my uncle and I’ll marry any wom an you want me to marry,” he tells Sheriff Clark. Miss S. Mornnd, 382 St. Mark’s place, Tompkinsville, Staten Island, New York, is Just 19 years old, and "has hopes,” she writes the sheriff. "I have the very highest ideals of West erners,” she says In her letter. Miss Rita C. Waieker, 205 West lOIst street, Manhattan, New York, says: "I hear you have a supply of married men on hand. I want to settle down to home life. 1 aifi n trained i nurse. 40 years old, brown hair, gray eye«." George Muir, 351 West Thirty-ninth street. New York, has a real reason for wanting to get m arried: "I have nose bleed and the doctor says If I can get married It will cure the trouble," he wrote Sheriff Clark. New Jersey "bids” number more than 100. Letters from practically every state In the Union are Included In that bushel of letters which stands on the sheriff's desk. Declared to be more than 900 years old, this giant oak stands on the property of the Woman's National Foundation In Washington, where a group of buildings will be erected for various women’s activities. The Institute, which Is backed by some of the leading women of the country, will cost $5,000,000. » Troubles Beset Tourist Abroad Lack of Hotel Accommodations in European Cities Stumbling Block to Traveler. MANY SLEEP IN BATHROOMS Fortune Awaits Ambitious American Who W ill Go Into Hotel Business in Europe— Hotel Portier Powerful Potentate. Vienna.—A fortune Is awaiting any ambitious American who will come to Europe and go into the hotel business. There ure, of course, complications In the way. Building materials are high, though when the exchange rate Is con sidered not so high as at home. Labor demands high wages, according to the German and Austrian standard—hut that standard leaves the skilled work man earning, according to American values, considerably less than $1 a day. Again, there are inevitable stumbling blocks in the way of government tax when a piece of loud changes hands. Also the International money condi tions which huve caused Germnny and Austria to become beloved of English, American, Dutch, French, Rallan and Scandinavian tourists may change be fore new hotels can be built, though It doesn't look as though they would. At any rate, eliminating unexpected complications, the hotel business to the eye of the layman now looks as If It must pay better than nny other in the world. Sleeping In the Bathroom. I t Is more or less difficult to get a hath In any German or Austrian or Hungarian hotel nowadays, because all of the bathrooms are being used for bedrooms. Not that the guests sleep in the tubs, no, they merely sleep In beds or cots that have been added to the usual bathroom furniture, and they count themselves rather fortunate than otherwise because, while they are en joying the use of the bathroom os a Bleeping apartment they likewise pre empt the use of the tub. I slept in the bathroom myself In Munich, and It was very comfortable. Building additions, redecorating and renovating In general, Is now too ex pensive for the average German or Austrian. Private dwellings and public Institutions alike show rather distress ing wear and tear. Hospitals in partic ular are shabby to a point where their executives bemoan that they are un sanitary. Private apartment houses are spotty as to paint and dangerously raveled as to stair coverings. Hotels are uni versally, however. In a state of newly painted smartness and are being brave ly remodeled and redecorated. all of this he Is mighty, and he Is a power to be envied by many an up-to- date potentate. The portler at the Adlon in Berlin Is said to own one of the smartest villas In Wahnsee, one of the smartest suburbs of that city. But the Importance of the portler has Increased many fold since after- the-war conditions have made a room In a hotel a thing to be desired beyond great riches. His nod and his frown are Jovian in their might. His nod comes only when the would-be guest can show proof that he wired the hotel for rooms and that the wire wns answered favorably. Otherwise, there Is the frown. It Is a frown which may, on occasions, be deflected by the proper means, delicately Introduced, or, rath er, tendered. It Is a frown which may, on the other hand remain consistently and honestly discouraging. Wanted— A Room. One Lone Trout Stops Coal Mine London.—Close to 600 men lost a day’s work this week at a col liery In Lanarkshire through a trout choking the water supply for the boilers. The cage could not be lifted to the pithead, as the boilers were not working. After a great deal of trouble the cause of the breakdown was dis covered. The trout weighed one pound and six ounces. Work was resumed next day. <♦. • • • • <-e'.e's--e-e'-e--e"e"e--e-- a--a--^ through the lobby, emulated by other racing and wild-eyed travelers, only to be told that there, too, people are sleeping In the bathrooms. Ah, a Boarding House. At last one Jovian gentleman In the haughty regalia of a portler took pity on a lady traveling alone—this was the fifth hotel—and telephoned to the keeper of a pension or boarding house that he knew. Yes, she had a vacant room, the portler was pleased to In form me and accepted a slight gratuity for his condescension. We dashed again and this time the driver carried the luggage up three flights of dark, draughty and oniony stairs. The pension keeper met us at the door, sweet but sorry. No, the room was taken. A gentleman had come Just after she had answered the telephone. “But you promised,” I walled. “Promised, miidame?" she repeated. I do not promise. I merely said that at that, moment there was a room va cant. There Is none vacant now.” The luggage was carried down the dark and oniony stairs again, and an other hotel was tried. Here there was another portier who knew a pension, and In this pension, at last, there was haven—of a sort. It was of the sort that Is frequently disturbed during the night by things with six legs. The experience, however, Is not unique. And because many hotels were appropriated for other uses during the war and have never been restored to their original utilitarian field, nnd be cause no building has been done for seven yenrs nnd tourists from all over the world find It pleasant and profit able to sojourn In these lands where money Is cheap—the hotel business would seem to be a plensant and profit able one.—Miriam Telchner In Chicago News. There was. for Instance, thnt experi ence In Budapest. I had wired for rooms In the Hotel Ritz, from Vienna. No answer had come, but the portler in the hotel at Vienna had been an op timistic soul and had advised risking It. I risked It and arrived at Budapest shortly after 9 p. m. It turned out that the advice of the portler was not good advice. There was no room to be had at the Ritz. People, the portier was pleased to In form me, were sleeping In all of the bathrooms. He recommended another hotel; the hotel was courteous, but It also was full; it recommended another. The affair resembled the chariot race from "Ben Hur,” though slightly more thrilling. Every one else In the city seemed to be trying to find rooms in a hotel, too. If there are traffic laws In Budnpest they are made like New Year’s resolutions, only to be broken. The droschko drivers are ancient and ragged daredevils, who delight in zig zagging across the paths of automo biles and trains and other droschkes. They whiz past one another on the bias, they clatter out from side streets, they risk, a thousand times, a wheel caught In a trolley track and utter dis aster. Other horses dashingly drawing oth er droschkes prance up behind one nnd one feels tlielr hot breath on the neck and they seem about to make their suppers off of one's back hair. Then Peru Is planning to spend several they pass, the wheels of their drosch million dollars to give Lima and sev kes alarmingly near. And another hotel eral other towns fresh water, sewers Is reached and one races madly and other sanitary Improvements. Centrifugal Gun Is a Wonder Hotel Portier le All Powerful. The hotel portler always In Europe has been a dignitary of considerable prominence. In his admiral's coat, his linguistic ability, his Infallible knowl edge of train schedules and theaters and that omnipotence of his In playing chess—with vacant rooms ns his squares and guests as his pawns—In • ^ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * WWWWWMW+ Home. Just Erected. Burned to the Ground Stephen A. Long, a carpenter of Margate City, N. X, camped in a tent all summer with his family that they might save enough to build a small bunga low. I-ong built the home before and after his day’s work, recent ly completing the bungalow, The “moving” was quite an event and the family went to the theater at night as a little cele bration. When they returned they found blackened ruins. The fireplace at the end of the cosy living room had thrown off a s|Hirk that fired the building, which waa not Insured. I.leutennnt Colonel Olmstead demonstrating to a party of government of ficials a new centrifugal gun at Seagirt, N. J. Firing 1.200 shots a minute, the gun riddled a steel target. The barrel of the gun is six Inches In length, suit ably machined for minimum air resistance, with a bore of 50-100 of an Inch from the nuixxle to the center. In actual firing thia barrel may be revolved and firing take place at from 4.000 to 16.000 revolutions per minute. Thia wide range of speed results In an equally wide range of penetrating power nt any given distance.