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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1925)
I 1 Stye Wnrnnfcttt ïbralft • VOL. XIX FEEDERS’ MEETING AT EXPERIMENT STATION DATE B FRIDAY, MARCH 20, AT i f . M. Lamb* Proving Profitable Way of Marketing Hay Again This Year. Prominent Speaker» are Announ ced For the Meeting. COMMUNITY CLUB MEETING POSTPONED HERMISTON. UMATILLA COUNTY. OREGON. THURSDAY. MARCH 12. 1925 FURTHER SURVEY OF RIG PROJECT The Community club meeting has been postponed one week. The next regular meeting of the club will be held on Tuesday, March UMATILA RAPIDS DIRECTORS TO 24 Instead of Tueaday, arch 17. Ona PRESS MOVE FOR USE OF POWER Of the features of the program will be a paper and stereoptlcon views on wild flowers. A splendid program State Engineer Asked To Investigate U being prepared and all members Colombia Power Site. F. B. are urged to come and bring a friend. Swayze in Attendance at Watch the paper next week for fur Meeting ther notice. As a means of marketing hay lam ba are again this year proving profitable. During the past two year» the Iamb feeding tests at the WHAT A PEEPER SAW At a meeting of the directors of PTxperlment Station at Hermiston the Umatilla rapids association held show that lambs have paid, on the in Portland yesterday steps were (By Inal Iteo.) average, double the market price of How little we know about our fel- taken towards securing a further ■bay In the stack after all items of ! lows! What secret ambitions they 'investigation of the reclamation feat- ■expense such as cash outlay for the hold! What hidden accomplish, ' ures of the project. It is particularly grain, labor. Interest and Incidentals ments He beneath their casual every- desirous to ascertain If the lands of have been deducted. ! dayness! For a week I have been , the Boardman area and the Horse The tests for the winter will be trying to find out something about Heaven region in Washington, elim during the coming week this Mikado show and all I could get inated from the federal t eport, are • nd Friday afternoon. March 20, at out of the cast was a giggle, a snick not worthy of irigation'. It is con 2 o’clock the results of these tests er and a plain statement that If I tended by men familiar with the and those of previous years will be wanted to know I could buy a ticket field that these lands may be suc- discussed In a meeting at the Experi for the show on the 17th and 18th. | cessfully farmed If provided with ment Station. The meeting will not Finally I got mad. The chorus ' water. They go farther and say that be confined to lambs but will cover the whole world could know shout, the federal report as It stands elim all phases of the sheep Industry of for anyone who was not deaf as an inates the best lands on the project Interest to Irrigation farmers. adder could hear them four bloclys and takes In lands lying at a high a . L. Potter, head of the Animal awey. It was the story of the thing ¡elevation where Irrigation by pump Husbandry division of the Oregon jtnd principally how our local talent ing is necessarily costly Experiment Station, will open the compared with the professionals that The directors passed a resolution discussion under the title, "Lambs, I wanted to know, and apparently I asking the governor, under authority Ewes or Hay.” Robert Withycombe, couldn't find out by fair means. So. vested in him by a law passed in who for 20 years has been conduct- as a reporter know8 only that he 1921 to have the state engineer make in«- farm flock tests at the Eastern must get the "stuff,” I traded ol’f an investigation. Rhea Luper, state Experiment Station at Union, my conscientious scruples for a good engineer, was In attendance at the •—W talk on "Selection and Manage stout soap box and listened in— some meeting and stated he would under ment of Farm Flocks ” R. P. Bean, take the work soon. Governor where. ■ superintendent of the Prosser, Wash The Mikado of Japan, Mr. J. A. Pierce was to attend the meeting ington Station will give the results Reeves. Now. In real life, In charge but was prevented by the death of o f five years feeding at that station. of our letlrs and mail order catalogs, Mrs, Pierce on Sunday. The present Interest in the farm Owing to illness on the part of he seems qul-e p lei-” ig »»d polite Pock should Justify every project J. ,N Teal, president of the project farmer In spending the afternoon at but we’re used to him As the Mi kado his dignity is no less than ap association, he could not attend the the station. palling. He looks Immensely tall, meeting and asked to be relieved and his voice booms out most Im of the presidency. Marshall N. Dana RAISING DAY OLD CHICKS pressively. “Boil ’em In oil,’* he associate editor of the Oregon Jour thunders, and his subjects tremble. nal. was chosen to finish out Mr. (Continued from last week.) In a flowered silk ktmona he’s a pie. Teal's term and Mr. Teal was made chairman of the board of directors; By MRS. WILL RHODES. ture that one must see to believe. Among those in attendance at the Nankl-Poo, Mr. Hugh Walker. Watch your chicks closely; If they are looking (poor, plumage rough, Is too well known for me to tell you meeting were Judge G. W. PhelpH, legs white or bluish, eyes dull and of his histrionic abilities, but I as G. A. Hartman, George C. Baer and wings drooping, and with no sign of sure you I’m surprsed only two E. B. Aldrich of Pendleton, F. B bowel trouble and still a good appe women were after Nankl-Poo. He Swayze of Hermiston and William Warner, Alderdale, Wash., A. H. Dev tite, your brooder has mites, which has a way with l)im. are sucking the life blood from the Ko-Ko, Mr. Raymond Crow edr. ers, Portland, and Mr. Dana. At a chicks at night. Remember you Now who would think that one whom luncheon held at the Benson hotel w ill not see the mites unless you get we had associated with the printing Captain Mayo, U S. engineer In ?>”sy and look for them. Under the of our butter wrappers, and collect charge of the Columbia river dis roosts, In cracks of the -floor and ing "all the news that fit to print” trict. and Fred C. Shubert, engineer, walls are likely hiding places in the for the Herald (and sometimes wall were guests and addressed the meet day time. When a large number of ing that all he can collect Is news* ing. chicks are brooded together there l8 was all the time a real actor. I wag Legislation secured at Washing danger of smothering by crowding. amazed at the versatility of the man. ton by Congressman Slnnott and There should always be someone Quit a man of affairs with beheading Senator McNary, provides for a fur present In the brooder room when the folks and getting engeged, disengag ther survey of the project by the chicks are bedding down for the ed and married. When Crowder, I bureau of reclamation. The act night to see that they are dlstrlbut- mean Ro-Ko, makes love------ well I'll passed provides for the use of ap r ’ - — iy over the floor of he brood- tell you what I saw. When Ko-Ko proximately 18,000 left over from R lTO oB, made his plea to Katisha for her the original Burvley appropriation. After pulletg have been separated heart and hand, a photo of Rodolph It Is presumed this work will he from the cockerels and are about Valentino on the piano Just wilted done during the present year. At two months old, they should be giv and fell to the floor face down! the game time the state englner will en more range and plenty of room Honest. make an Investigation and the gov to develop Into large thrifty pullets. Pooh-Bah, Mr. Wallace Reid. As ernor of Oregon is asked by resolu The use of colony houses with fifty Pooh-Bah Wallace has an awful tion to request the same action from or seventy-five pullets to each house, dignity to uphold and he doe» It In the state of Washington with refer scattered around through the orchard a stiff unbending way that makes ence to the Horse Heaven district Is a very good method. If you have one believe there is something in this lands. no orchard, provide good cool shade ancestor stuff. He walks as though It w a, asserted yecterdny by Wil for the pullets during the hot part he were balancing his ancestors, his liam Warner of Alderdale that the of the day. Do not force them to offices and hig salaries on his head. soil survey by the state of Washing drink from stagnant pools. Plsh-Tush, Mr. Jack Waller. As ton shows the low lands of the Horse If you have any weak chicks In the Pish-Tush’s part seems to be mostly Heaven area suited for Irrigation. beginning kill them be they few or singing and he has very little to President Dana appointed 15 B. many. An undersized, weakly pul say, I can't see who gave out the Aldrich, G. A. Hartman and William let will not give a paying egg yield. parts and caBt Jack for a non-talk Warner a8 a committee to bring out Feed your pullets properly, giving ing part. the four major features of the pro them plenty of green feed during Yum Yum, Miss Compton, Plttl- ject. reclamation, power, river lm- the growing season, and they should Slng, Mrs. Gralapp, and Peep-Bo, make a fifty to sixty per cent lay Mrs. Illsley can’t be taken individual by the first of December and keep it ly, they never could be caught that up all winter. way. They Just tittered andglggled It Is not natural for chickens to and bowed their way about till one lay In winter tizfte. They must be could see with closed eyes cherry bred to lay. It takes years of blossoms and hanboo trees, with Fuji breeding to perfect a strain that w ill lay out of season. Given a in the distance. Katisha, Miss Lota Pierson. As good strain It Is up to the good management of the poultryman to fsr as I could see this ancient Katisha get the eggs. The most successful started the whole thing with her old poultryman is the one who gets a maidenly Infatuation for Nankl-Poo, full egg basket every day of the year. and Miss Pierson’s interpretation of You cannot dpend upon mature the part Is excellent. "Tough as a hens over a year old for winter eggs. bone, with a will of her ow»,” she It Is the pullet In her first year’s describes herself, but she evidently lay that produces eggs when prices has a softer side, for In her love are high. Never turn pullets or scene with Ko-Ko she Is all coyness. All this I saw from my soap box hens out on the range la the win ter time to walk on snow or Ice, or grand stand, and I thought I should to drink snow water. If you wish satisfy my curiosity, but I find I only to keep your egg production up. whetted It. I got awfully tired Keep the pullets working, for exer standing all the time though, so I am going to see the Mikado right cise is the life of the hen. CKl your pullets Into their laying next time and get a reserved seat quarters early. I generally start at Mitchell's right away for either this woifc the middle of September, 1 the Tuesday night show or the re because It takes considerable time peat on Wednesday. Maybe both. to get them set In thlr proper place*. Thia must be done gently and quiet A social meeting of the Baptist ly; don’t go at It as If the first day ladies' Aid will be given nt the were the last day you had to do the home of Mr». Norton with Mrs. Me- work lu. Don’t leave your pullets i Clare assleting hostess. on March 25. out to roost In the tree tops or (June aud enjoy the a'temoon with wherever else they may choose till us. cold, stormy weather sets lu. Good stock, good housing sad good lieptist church—Sun .lay, March feeding are Important but nulees the caretaker la good to the bens they IS. Bible school at 1« A. M. Ser- w ill not pay. By •'good" I mean pron at 11 A. M-, "What Think Ye of Christ.” Service at 7:88 P. M. A. (Oontlnucd on Page Four) □[ provement and interstate bridge. F. B. Swayze of Hermiston was ap pointed as finance committee chair man. IRRIGATION LEAGUE AGAIN TO FUNCTION BOARDMAN, UMATILA, HER MIS TON. STANFIELD ARE TEAMS Season to Start April 12 and End June 28.— Stanfield Plays Open ing Game Here Boardman, Umatilla, Hermiston and Stanfield was represented last Wednesday night at a meeting of the Irrigation league held In Uma tilla. Harry Hull of Umattlja was elected president, Dave Mtttlesdorf vice-president, and W. Wallan of Stanfle|d secretary treasurer. The season will start April 12 and end June 28. Stanfield plays the open ing game here. Henry Hitt was appointed director of the local club and DaVn Mittles- dorf elected secretary and treasurer- By a unanimous choice Otto Pierce was chosen manager. It was decided at the meeting to use only home players Most of the rules and regulations that governed the league last year were adopted by the meeting and will be used again this year. No. 27 Early lambing results have very satisfactory on the whole, though not so big a percentage of Increase has been secured this spring us born last spring, according to P. Smythe, prominent sheep man Of Brief Resume of Happenings of Pendleton. The weekly lumber review of the the Week Collected for West Coast Lumbermen's association showed that 120 mills reported for the Our Readers. week ending February 28 the manu facture of 100,414,867 feet of lumber; The Medford Y. M. C. A. has begun sale of 96,000,108 feet and shipment a campaign to raise 83000. of 106,961.382 feet. The annual meeting of the Linn James S. Stewart of Corvallla was County Holstein Cattle club will be appointed special Investigator for the held at Harrisburg Friday. state land board. Mr. Stewart will Frank Delbert Jones, 41, painter, investigate all applications for school was killed instantly at Medford by a fund loans, and arrange for the sale fall from a barn which he was paint of lands on which these loans have ing. become delinquent. The graduating class of the Pen Collection of the unpaid portion of dleton high school that will complete the state income tax for the year Its work In June will Include between 1924, based on incomes for 1928, will 56 and 60 students. get under way within the next few Portland will be the greatest con days, according to announcement vention city in the United States this made at the offices of the state tax year, with about 30 large and small commission at Salem. conventions scheduled. Members of the state board of con The first annual Lane county Jer trol held a special meeting at Salem sey jubilee will be held at the farm Saturday to consider plans and spe of L. D. Griggs in the Willakenzie dis cifications for the proposed new state training school for boys to be located trict some time in May. near Woodburn. The proposed plant The Sunset Co-operative Fishermen will cost approximately 8200.000. of Nehalem bay have started con A total of 247 applications for loans struction at Wheeler of a packing and aggregating 8197.795.57 have been re cold storage plant to cost 85000. ceived by the state board of control Sine January 1 23 new families under a law enacted at the recent have been located in Jackson county session of the legislature extending by the lund settlement committee of financial relief to farmers In the frost the Medford chamber of commerce. Infected areas of eastern Oregon. Portland again led the Pacific Eleven carloads of broccoli have northwest in value of building per been shipped out of Douglas county mlts issued during the month of Feb up to the present, and the crop Is ruary, with 1236 permits, valued at maturing rapidly. It is estimated that 83,504,680. the harvest this year will yield around Despondent over ill health for more 35 carloads, practically the entire than a year. Mrs. S. Kinser, wife of crop being in the Riddle and Myrtle a well-known farmer at Needy, at Creek vicinity. tempted suicide by leaping into the Because of the new prohibition law, Molalla river. providing for the distribution of mon Two bond issues, 810,000 for addi ey for enforcement purposes, and giv tional tire equipment and 815,000 for ing the state agent 50 per cent of all the construction of a new city jail, fines collected, it will be necessary were defeated at a special election to reduce the law enforcement staff held in Bend. In Douglas county, according to Dis Robert Cruniley, 60, operator of a trict Attorney Cordon. donkey engine in the camp of the The state supreme court handed Crown Timber company at Linslaw, down an opinion affirming the decree was killed when the disc on the en of Judge Kendall of Coos county In a gine broke end struck him in the gtde. suit brought by J. E. Norton to enjoin Work of laying rails above the pres Coos county, a municipal corpora ent rail head at McCredie Springs on tion, and its officials from issuing and the Southern Pacific company's Eu- selling highway bonds for 8280,008, gene-Klamatb Falls line will begin The lower court held la favor of the plaintiff. March 15, according to company ficials. Orin W^Trein, 69, well kuegra to A hundred tons of road building the e Evans creek district, near Med- machinery are at Bend, ready to be ford, where he had lived nearly 40 rushed to the McKenzie pass and years, was found dead on his ranch placed in operation In an effort to with a bullet wound through his head. complete the road over the mountains Although the dead man had a 38-call- ber revolver in one hand, from which this season. a shell had been exploded, there Is The Douglas county court has call some doubt of suicide. ed for bids for the paving of approxi The United States bureau of public mately one-half mils of Edenbower road, which branches off west from roads will co-operate in a Eugene- the Pacific highway about a mile Bend celebration over the completion of McKenzie pass, according to word north of Roseburg. received at Eugene from C. H. Pur Contracts under which dairymen of cell, district engineer. Mr. Purcell the west end of Umatilla county ex suggested Frog camp as the celebra pect to sell their cream co-operatively tion site, nnd late August as the time, have been drafted, nnd a meeting to Definite plans have not been made, put the plan into effect Is to be held however. in the near future. At a meeting of the Oregon Jersey Tho Gates Mill company, whose Cattle club, definite dates were set sawmill Is located at Schroeder, about for the county shows to be held a mile east of Gates, has started the throughout the state. The Columbia plant for the first time In about two county show will be on May 18; Clack years, and II Is planned to operate amas county on May 20; Marion on steadily from now on. May 21; Polk, on May 22; Linn, on Contrary to usual custom, the an May 23, and Lune, on May 25. Other cual Polk county fair will be operated 1 counties are scheduled, but definite with a free gate this year, according dates have not been chosen. to a decision made by the now fair Oregon dealers disposed of 5,316,- board. The dates for this year’s event 655 gallons of gasoline and 62,616 gal were set as September 10, 11 and 12. lons of distillate in January, accord When the time expired at Salem ing to a report issued by Sam A. Ko- for filing l> Ils and vetoes resulting sor. secretary of state. Taxes remit from measuieg approved at the recent ted on the January sales of gasoline session of the legislature, Governor and distillate aggregated 8160.945.07, Pierce had lopped off from the ap As compared with January. 1924, gas proprlatlonj the amount of 8501,769. oline sales increased approximately The Crown Willamette Paper com 25 per cent, while distillate sales In pany has torn up two miles of its Ne- creased 18 per cent. canlcum logging road track and is To insure that Medford’s clean-up sending the rails to Cathlamet. and palnt-up week, designated by the Wash.a where a logging road exten- city council as April 1 to 8, Is thor aloa is ureter course of construction. ough, the Crater club, city booster or Work lr being rushed by the Ham ganisation. has adopted the plan of mond Lumber company on the com displaying photographs of unsightly pletion of several new bridges on their buildings and untidy yards in the logging railroad to camp 24 at Mill chamber of commerce windows and City, and as soon as finished the will award a prize to the person who camps will be reopened for the sum submits a complete list naming those responsible for the eyesores. mer run. Governor Pierce announced that he The work of paving the left span of the tew Lewis & Clark bridge at had reluaed either to sign or veto a Astoria has been completed and It Is bill passed at the recent session of announced that the bridge will be the legislature increasing materially opened as soon as adjustments to the fees on automobile busses and the spr.n lifting machinery had been trucks operating on the highways of the stste. Unless attacked In the completed. Vera Klore of Ixmklng Glass and court» the bus bill will become ef Wendell Smith of Klamath Falls re fective at the expiration of the 90- ceived grades of 100 per cent In eg- day statutory period. The law re aminations having to do with the Old quires busses to pay three-fourths of Testament, while Winton Erickson of a mill per passenger seat per mfte. Oregon City scored 100 per cent on while trucks would be assessed a fee the New Testament, according to a of 1 mill per ton per inlle. It has been report prepared by J A. Churchill, estimated that this law would return slate superintendent of public In to the state treasury approximately atrurtlon. The examinations were 8400.000 during the biennium. The held In connection with Bible study In attorney-general. In his legal opinion the high schools, for which the stu to the governor, held that the law dents receive credits (or graduation. was unconstitutional. OREGON NEWS ITEMS OIL DRILLING IS RESUMED OF SPECIALINTEREST NEW EXPRESS RATES Changes In express rates and the chargee ordered by the Interstate Commerce Commission, effective on March 1, will result in economies for shippers acordlng to F. C. Woughter. agent of the American Railway Ex press Co. in this city. While there are some Increases In rates applying particularly In the eastern territory, genersllf speaking the charges are downward and low er rates will prevail In the greater part of the country. The most mark ed reductions are in the South and West, thu„ enabling shippers to re duce their transportation costs. Mr, Woughter has prepared the following rate comparisons showing the new rate8 compared with the old, from this city to important points throughout the country. Portland, new rate 81.85, old rate 82.08; Seattle, new rate $2.60, old rate. 82.91; Spokane, new rale 82.10, old rato 82.36; Chicago, new rate 88 80, old rate 811-92; Kansas City, Mo., new rate 88.00, old rate 810.95. i t * SUFFICIENT FUNDS SECURED TO RENEW WORK ON WELL Revival of Oil Opeations is Evident in Northwest From Recent Ac tivities. Prospects Consider ed Good Here. Drilling was resumed at the oil well this week. The company has secured sufficient funds to enable it to reach a depth at which gas Is found in the Rattlesnake hills thirty miles north of the Hermiston anti cline. Stock will be sold to carry the holo down further and drilling will be carried on as far a8 It can be paid for. Revival in oil operations Is evident from recent activities. Four big oil companies. Including Mellon inter ests In Pittsburg, the New York Oil Company, the Gulf States company, with Dorsey Hager, the celebrated oil geologist, have offices in Seattle and will make deep drilling tests of all the fields in the state of Wash ington including the Benton county gas and oil region just north of the Hermiston structure. Another com pany, supposed to be a California re fining company has leases and will spud in near Ione, or about twenty miles southwest of here, and an other company. Independent of the California company, has also secur ed leases in the same locality south of Hermiston, with guarantee to drill before summer. The well at Attalla has cased off water and is drilling again with strong showings and ex pects to continue operations. The Washington companies have secured the services of Dorsey Hager, the celebrated geologist, and geolog ists of the state university and will endeavor to test out scientifically and with deep drillings all localit ies In that state that have been worked on for the last several years. It Is the biggest effort In the North west to discover oil. Dr. Herschel C. Parker, the noted scientist, who recently gave an inter view in the Oregonfnn, stated that on the west slopes of the Blue moun tains “There are several domes great er than Teapot and some of the best anticlines In the world.” Dr. Par ker visited the Hermiston anticline two years ago for the local company. Fred Nlchoson 18 the driller and Ben E. Juday his assistant. Both have rented houses In Hermiston and moved their families here. làs High School Mirror Devoted to the Interest and Devel opment of the Hermiston Schools Vol. 4. Basebanll practice has begun this week with the advent of the baseball season. Coach Gralapp Is expecting an expert squad this year. No. 1 music. Refreshments were served and the evening was spent dancing, The party broke up at eleven o'clock. everyone reporting an enjoyable time. Remember the local Declamatory Hubby, the Brute contest at^he high school auditorium Arlonlne: "I am going to the Friday, March 13. beauty parlor and will need ten dol lars.” The interedasg basketball teams, Hugh: "Take twenty." who played while the first team at tended the tournament, held a party Father's Sarcasm at the I. O. O. F. hall Saturday night, Anita; Karr hs proposed to me the freshmen and sophomore teams and their girls being guests. Mrs. no less than seven times in the last Bensel, Mrs. Pace and Mrs. Mike- two weeks." Mr. Paulsen: "Well, I wonder Bell acted as chaperones, while Mrs. Brigg’s orchestra furnished the who he is practicing up for.” Nothing Doing Y et n to. Opera— "Mikado”— March 17-18 Opera— "Mlkgdo”— March 17-1|