Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1923)
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HEBMISTON, ^OBEG j OIT. Œlj» tyrmiatun ijrruló Published arary Thursday at Her miston, Umatilla County, Oregon by Raymond Crowder, Editor and Man ager. Entered as second class matter, December 1906 at the postoffice at Hermiston, Oregon. Subscription Bates For One Year __......._________ »2.00 For Six Months _____________$1.00 Payable in Advance. Classified or Local Advertising 10 cents per line for first Insertion. Minimum charge 25 cents. Subse quent Insertions 5 cents per line. Getting By Show us the man who is "getting by And brags of that fact himself. And we’ll show you a sort of half- baked guy. Who will soon be laid on the shelf He’s the man Bostonians call a "slob,” He’s one of the listless flock. And he keeps one eye on his hated Job, And the other eye on the clock, And that most certainly means a visible preparation for another strug gle. Today It la possible to observe al most hour by hour a resist less dest iny setting the scene for the real Armageddon, the Last War, of which the Great War was the preparatory chapter. The Great War was fought by Ill-assorted allies who normally would not have been allies. Now the natural allies will find each other, and not the least surprising element of the new alignment will probably be that (Germany, perhaps separated from some of her present kingdoms, will be lined up with her former en emies, allies of Britian and America. Rightly or wrongly, that seems to be the way the finger is pointing. persecution of Jews in Poland is one that needs to be written about Im partially. The Jews know what ef fect reports of ’pogroms’ have In the United States and they often exagg. erate little Incidents or fabricate en tirely such tales as will be sure to draw sympathy for them, ¿a for my own experience, I can assure you that no ’pogroms’ or persecution has taken place In the regions where I have lived during my stay of three years.” , For the first time In history a woman. Mrs. Anna L. Swynnerton, a painter, has been elected un associate of the Royal Academy of England. A qpw cable-way among the clouds is being built up Mont Blanc. Pas sengers will be transported in 90 minutes from summer heat to frigid ) cold while snow and ice avalanches crash harmlessly by. hundred of feet beneath the suspended cable cars. Each car will seat 20 persons. MR. PUP— SALESMAN The other evening a bunch of us was seated in a hotel lobby, and there catne wandering Into our midst a half-grown pup. His pedigree was as mixed as boarding-house hash The undergraduates of Wesleyan and an X-ray to determine his spinal and other vertebrae would have been University have voted to abstain from drinking rum while the college altogether superfluous. Is in session. First offenders will A bell-hop promptly escorted him be Inelltgible for sports or student through the door. In a few min office. Second offenders will be ex He curses the fate that makes man utes he waB back again, only to re pelled or suspended. The action out peat the process. toll. lined above was not taken as Jhe re Shortly thereafter he came trot- sult of any outbreak of drinking at For the things -that mortals crave. The fate that thrusts men under the Ing in through another door. He the college but as a further Btep In had a most ingratiating manner and soil. self-government. he would stop before one or another To their only rest, the grave. Oh, not for him i8 tho struggle grim of us with that look of appealing trustfulness that only children and And ho winks a knowing eye. * « And tells the toilers whose pleasuses pup dogs can put over. ♦ 0 . A. C. FARM REMINDERS * Soon a hand was put out to give are slim ♦ « him a friendly pat, and the way that How easy he is "getting by.” pup and the fellow warmed up to It Is estimated that one-third of Pity the men who are "getting by" each other was remarkable; even his natural enemy, the bell-hop, thawed the 3CO,000 Invested annually In fer In this game of Existence here; out and slipped him a hunk of meat tilizers in Oregon is wasted. The For youthful play old age will pay he had purloined from the kitchen. farmer should learn the elements And the price it pays Is dear. That pup succeeded In being allow most needed In the particular soli The gate Io success wide and liigl And beyond It fair blossoms grow ed to remain where it was warm, to types of his land and plan to supple Hut the fellow contented with ’get get something to eat, and to make ment with these to build up the gen friends, because he was a salesman. eral fertility over a period of years. ting by" He hnd nothing to sell but himself Many worn grain lands and hill Will never get by to know. — Calgary Vivlfier — and hls visible stock in trade was lands of Washington and Oregon re far from A l, but he knew the fund pond to applications of available phosphate. . amentals. THE MARCH INTO GERMANY He realized he had a hard proposi Informed people are not surprised Vegetable growers have three pos tion to put over and that he could by France’s march Into Germany. not sell unless he could get to the sible markets for their produce and The wonder is that it has been de a n well afford to recognize this be layed so long after being so definite huyerB, so he was persistent. Putting him out once or twice fore planting heavily to vegetable ly foreshadowed. But no one Is welt meunt nothing In hls young life, and crops. They have only the local mar enough Informed Io see what the end I really think that he had a sense of ket. the canneries and dehydrators, shall be. Fiance has determined to go the advertising value— the attention- and the shipping markets. Produce Is it alone regardless of world opinion. creating value— hls "puttings out” generally sent to the shipping mar She feels that the world does not and reappearances would create. kets only when the vegetable is understand the position and wilfully Even In the moments of stress dic grown In the community in carload refuses to share her emotion, and ing the putttng-out processes ne ots. Some good thinking now may 6he has, therefore, decided to make ave much In the future especially the bast of the power she possesses never forgot to be a gentleman. No; he was a wise dog; he depart toward the end of summer. to prove herself still to be a factor in world affairs. Any nation choos ed each time quietly and philosophi Sulfur 18 very profitable on most ing that course could become a fact cally, and reappeared the same way, or In world affairs. It means, on the with hls tail wagging in gentle frend- arid and semi-arid alfalfa lands, es trouble ostensibly between Greece liness and hls brown eyes searching pecially under irrigation. Potash pays and Turkey meant, that France Is Into the faces of the humans about on potatoes with certain residual him, not boldly, not cringlngly, but oils in central Oregon. Except as a cutting loose from her allies. with quiet assuredness that com The cause Is simple: Germany has manded attention— and so he put hls starter and for intensive crops, ni trogen should be obtained through not delivered to France the amount proposition across.— Exchange. 'egunie residues and the unlimited | of coal allotted to her under the re lupply in the air. parations agreement. It Is so simple The Nobel Peace prize has been that In America It Is difficult to un awarded Fridtjof Nansen, doted Nor "A considerable acreage of alfal- derstand what it means. It means wegian explorer. He was promi principally that with Germany her nent In Russian relief work during 'a will probably be planted on the self suffering from a serious fuel- the famine of 1921. Dr. Nansen ts river bottom and other of the well shortage. German workmen revolt at professor of oceanography at Chris- irained soils of western Oregon next the thought of digging coal the year ilcnla University. He ha8 announ April and May,” says G. R. Hyslop, round and sending It to France. ced that he will devote the money arm crop8 specialist at the Oregon There can be no question that, hav awarded him In fostering hls inter Experiment station. "It la a good ing rendered French mines useles; national task of promoting a brother plan to secure the seed of the genu- ne Grimm alfalfa before stocks are by tho scientifically fiendish devast hood of nations. icpleted and to anticipate needs for ation of war Germany Is bound to andplaster which usually .helps In repay. Bot that Is not tho only ele Three-quarters of the mineral ,'etting a stand of alfalfa. The Grimm ment of the question. Of two men In bearing area of Alaska has never had alfalfa seed Is usually planted at a fight, the attacker should be com a prospector' pick in It. about 16 pounds to the acre. This ; pelled Io make good, but If the at amount may seem excessive to ex- ' tacker himself Is In tho hospital be During 1922, 7,469 miles of road lerienced alfalfa growers but for , cause of tho wounds ho received In projects were completed In the U. 8. ¡hose who are beginning In alfalfa his attack, there Is also the ques and 17,97 8 miles under construction ulture and who often sow seed too tion of ability to perform; and that were estimated as 50 per cent com leep. It is usually necessary to sow ts the situation in Europe. It does not plete. Federal aid earned by the t slight excess of seed. Inoculating settle anything to decide where jus states on »,11 road projects amounted naterlnl may be had at 25 cents an tice lies, for J t Is a complex of in to »194,560.135, of which »166.911.- acre from the department of bacterl justice on all sides which human In 552 had actually been pa d. ology at the college. The landplaster genuity has failed to untangle. is usually applied at about 50 to 76 It all comes to this, probably, that Chinamen are engaged In captur the loom of fate Is weaving the ing large sea turtles which abound pounds an acre to the land that is strands of further unsettlenient and on the western coast of Mexico. The to be planted to alfalfa.” disaster. The situation must he con meat of these turtles ts dried and Many persons who grew potatoes sidered as a whole and not as merely shipped to China where It finds a good enough to certify lust year sold French or Germany, and, of course, ready sale. iff most of their good ones and plant this is impossible for any European country to do. This Incident may Kentucky has another world won ed the inferior stock sorted out of pass for the present without appar der In Onyx Cave, near Mammoth those sold ns certified seed and in ent result. It appears to have been Cave. The caverns are close togeth nearly every Instance this stock car diplomatically managed thus far. er and It Is possible to Include both ried too much disease to certify this But In the future It spells the line In the same trip. Mammoth Cove year. In sorting potatoes this »'inter up of a new M< IHei anean alliance, has for more than a century attract, mve out for planting purposes plenty of good shapely tubers (or next sea with Polnn«'. Ito i i ami Turkey ed tourists from all over the world. son’s planting. It Is best not to save certainly with i ia tiie . a line aeroas Southern Europe, broken only by (he From Cracow. Poland, the Rev. H. very small ones as many of these possible refornl nf Italy to lake pari. H, Benedict, writes: "The subject of tljat seem very ripe or mature have mosaic. Any potato with a pointed stein end should be dlscardid. Dr. J. A. Peed who has been con fined to a hospital In Portland re turned home last week. This is good weather to get those posts set. You will have other things to do in the spring. W e have an extra good stock of posts for the price asked. W e sold a customer this week that had looked at stocks in other towns in this vicinity and then bought of us. Tura-A-Lum Lumber Co. R. A. Bro a n io n , Manager. îJust Received! 8 in Stock E Nice Soft Pine S u b s c r ib e N o w Table Tops ■ ! ■ -to the- and ! Table Legs : Regulation Sizes Hermiston Herald and keep informed of the events and happen ings in your commun ity. ■ Let us show them to you ■ ■ Inland Empire Lumber Compa Phone 331 “ The Yard of Bent Quality ” H. M. STRAW, MGR. 6 ■ ■ a i» Exclusive Representatives of National Builders Bureau W E A R E N O W IN O U R N E W L O C A T IO N The Herald carries one of the best Want Ad columns of any weekly paper in the state. --If you want to buy —If you want to se llw --If you want to trade You find the opportun ity in The Herald ad vertisements. (formerly occupied by Hermiston Light & Power Co.) And prepared to give the best of service in our line. 'Gifts Thai WM. H. OGDEN Jeweler and Walck Baker E c h o F lo u r M ills Echo, Oregon •M A N U F A C T U R E R S O F - High Grade Patent B lue S te m F lour . The Superior Product of Scientific Milling Makes Better Bread Try a Sack DEALERS IN GRAIN AND FEED --— ■ The Herald is the medium by which the merchants tell the citizens of the com munity of their busi ness. Watch the display advertisements tor the alter- Christmas bargain offers No Penury for “Tino,” as He Has Millions Safe Former King Constantine of Greece la In no dnnger of being reduced to the penury which embittered the last day» of for mer Emperor Charles of Aus trla-Hungnry, according to Greek circles In Paris. It la asserted that Constantine took precautions against thia long ago and has lfl.0fl0.0fl0 gold franca, or about »2 000.000, in safe Investments, deposited In New Tork City, Brasil, and !*ri(xerlam» The manglfleent W eis of Queen Sophie and the royal household plate, were shipped to Switzerland as soon as the situation in Greece be came disquieting. Is T h e H e r a ld is $2 per year, or$l for six months, payable in advance. __ I he Hermiston Herald—$2.00 » SUBSCRIBE NOW WEST END FARMERS Have learned that The Herald p rin tslh e best butter wrappers. We have the large size, 9 by 12 inches. Our prices are— 100 200 300 500 for for for for e $1.25 $2.00 $2.60 $3.75 Many are buying them in the larger quan tities, but we are here to Serve you all. If j-1 you want only a few we have them with- out the name. These we sell as follows— ~ f, 12 30 62 100 for 10 for 25 for 50 for 80 cents cents cents cents V “The Home of Good Printing’* THE HERMISTON HERALD