Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1925)
YOL. l i MGERS CHARGED WITH LIQUOR POSSESSION hebmbton , uhatulla county , oregon , T hursday , N ovember 2 6 .1 9 2 5 n o n m n ■ s M TAY DAM RUSH WORK “ Pleaae let us have two (weeks more of good weather for our work FINED >100 0 1 JUSTICE WEST’S before w inter gets in the saddle and ties ue up for the reet of the year.” COVET WEDNESDAY That a the prayer th at is being , E T H A N K thee, thou Most High, for youth, made by government engineers In I For, though'ri* fleeting, yet forsooth charge of the building of McKay 'T ie filled with freshness and with hope. H. A. Pankow Locate« Quantity Of dam, and the reason that they are And all unfathomed it the scop« saying that prayer w itn particular O f pain, of sorrow, or of mn. liq u or in BaMment of force is th t if they are granted an And sordid cares ne'er enter in additional two weeks in which to R ogen Home. The bright young yean; and naught is seen rush the work all the gravel w ill Save through the rosy, golden sheen have been hauled Into place and That shimmers in the summer sun. jyedneaday morning H . packed down to form all of the huge Hope wins the race before 'tis Pankow, deputy sheriff, armed w ith mound that now determinedly blocks And knows, though skies the channel of McKay creek. a search w arrant entered the shoe The morrow’s sun will drive away About 30,000 more cubie yards of A ll clouds. And so we say, in truth. stör« of Sam Rogers in this city and gravel must be hauled In from the We after a search found a large quan pits and packed down by the huge tity of wine in the cellar of the es tractors before the gravel mountain tablishment. Rogers appeared be reaches the height required by the E G IV E thee. Master, thank* for The whitened hair that marks the gauge fore Justice West and after a plea of government plans. The gravel work probably w ill be completed this fall, Placed on our brows by passing years guilty was fined >100. The stock That w ill leave the concrete work us our weary journey nears was hidden ln such a manner that and some other labor to be done 1 It* ending, and our backward it was only after a thorough In vesti- fore the big structure is completed. la keen and searching, lest pet_____ __ The dam has been built up to gatton it wag discovered. Some stumbling-block of ot^sbel placed grade for more than one-half of its A thw art the. path tome rouKha*\traced;' Oregon-Washington Game to be Real length. On the jsouth end the grav The marrow— that is left w ith tl el is net a ll on, and w ork is being For we have learned h u m ility ^ / Battle. rushed now. The trains are coming W e know ourselves; this lessontai University of Oregon, Eugene, Nov. in over only one track, and not so By hapj experience, has brought £5— Special— I f a policy now being large a forte of men can be accom w a y y sojourner his wage. worked out by Washington comes to modate! so that the volume of mater ' thee. Master, thanks for age. a successful head, the annual Oregon- ial moved by the two shifts lg less Washington ^game w ill be the biggest than when space was not so restrict football contest in this Northwest ed and the force was larger.. E G IV E thee, Fattier, thanks for death. cliu.axlng the Oregon-Oregon Aggie Some concrete facing has been Relying on thy word, which saith game and those in which Washington constructed on the upper side of “I am thy way,” we take thy hand, p'ays California or Stanford. This IS the dam, enough to protect the And, by thy side, just waiting, stand the opinion of Wayne Sutton, coach mound from any flood th at might Ready the Little steo to take of the University of Washington come down the channel of th® creek 'Tween Here and There; to sleep, to wake, freshman team which played the this w inter. Nlext summer’s chief T o live again, and to to learn bregon babes here Saturday w inn job w ill he to .continue building this The lessons from which now we turn ing 12 to 7. facing clear up to the slope. The Aadeep mad for beyond our ken, “There is no reason why there strip now completed is 50 feet wide sons of men; hon’ d not be a traditional rivalry clear across the bottom of th e slope. cannot see t' een the schools,” said Sutton. The concrete facing lg 12 Inches but turn to thee,^ "They are the only two big univer thick at the bottom and at the top trembling breath, ‘ sities in the northwest. We have it w ill be eight Inches thick. The W e thank thee most of all for death. t 0 rnalçe the Washington- downstream slope of the mound w ill m, luaW M U nam e •p*r Valoa.) Washington state game a traditional be unfaced.— East Oregonian. — one, but there is so much geographi ♦ • ♦ ♦ ♦ » ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ » ♦ ♦ ♦ > » • « ♦ » * ou r order and in search of such delicacies cal difference, and Washington is so HAVE IT YOUR OWN WAY— as turkey, cranberry sauce and pump kin pie when he noticed that the girl much bigger than the state school “COLD WINTER” BATTLE RAGES at the table beside him wore a bat like that the game refuses to draw. Dora Grayson's. Why, It was Dora By TOM BRADSHAW, "There is only one thing that pre Grayson I And beta erore her there was In Chicago Herald-Exdmlner. morte the Washington-Oregon game a small platter of «teaming turkey, Oregon farmers are being warned from, being the biggest contest in the EHOVAH, God of lands and sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce— by the Sears-Roebuck Agricultural seas, They exchanged smiles, and then northwest at the present time. I t Is Foundation against placing faith in Of winter's winds and summer Talmadge Scott found himself at her th inadequate seating capacity of forecasts of an extremely cold w in breeze, table sitting opposite her. Ditrn cither Hayward field a t Eugene or ter ahead to be followed by an un blushed with extreme embarrassment. Lend ear today while from th^ Multnomah field at Portland. I f seasonable summeri in 1925. The "You see, ,1 Just had- to have turkey, ranks Portland builds a football stadium it may be a m y th -a ll this business Of millions swells a prayer of w inter may be extremely cold and or the Multnomah club enlarges its about Thanksgiving—but I like It.” thanks the summer unseasonable, but scien present seating capacity I ’ took for So they feasted leisurely and hap For all that hope and faith hath ORA LOUISE GRAYSON, tists have no means of telling It at pily together. Later there were ex the Washington-Oregon game at brought, , in spite of caressing brown this early date. A week is the long planations. For summits reached, for lea tv -t'a n d to draw around 30,600 peo bobbed hair and starry bine est dip possible into the weattler “I was going to ask you to dine sons taught. eyes, fonnd herself at ple.” Neither is there reason for believ with me," said Talmadge Scott, “but For life and health and peace twenty-five a full-fledged Sutton said, since It is Washing ing that the winters in this sctlo j when I begun to and love, doctor of medicine, working ton’s tu rn to play Oregon here next talk about It you Jehovah, harken from above I no longer so cold nor the sum- In the clinic of the Children's hospital. seemed to pooh- year, that the Washington manage- mers so hot as formerly, according Somehow, worn, anxious - mothers Jehovah, God of years untold, pooh the Idea of Of saint and sinner, youth and ment is consderlng, of proposing to to the foundation, which quotes looked at her with so much trust and Thanksgiving din old, the Webfooters to play that game in weather bureau figures on the point so much confidence, she wondered how ners—" Give ear today—th' people* Seattle instead, where the stadium running back three decades. The it had all come about Sometimes she “And I'd rauJe stand doubted her own powers of endurance can crowd in 35,000 people. I t w ill mean December, January and Febru up my mind to With thankful hearts abroad the to go on. be a profitable vegjure fo r both ary temperature over the decade ask you to come land. Talmadge Scott, after several false schools, Sutton thinks. and have dinner 1895-1904 wbb 41.9 degrees. For marts and several years of bnsiness, To give Thee thanks for bless in my little apart ings new the decade 1905-1914 it wag 40.3; s f thirty found himself in possession ment with me. I That come with ev'ry morning's FOR WHICH WE GIVE THANKS and for 1915-1924, 40.1 degrees, a of his degree of doctor of medicine. was so anxious to dew— difference in the total range of 1.5 He wondered sometimes how It had cook It. But yt>'.' That follow on till night Is nigh. ever occurred to him that he could The prospects of the editor having degree. Thle mean tmperature for s a id something That aid them live and help possibly be anything else besides a a Thanksgiving dinner looked the same three w inter month# of last doctor. about the Thanks them die, giving myth, so 1 m ighty slim u ntil last Tuesday. year was 40.5 degrees. That shower on them through For several weeks Doctor Scott had didn’t.” “Snows th at lay on the ground been stopping every day at the Chil th' years. In memories he had takeir his stom. It wa* after din That mingle happiness with ach back to reunions and dinner par for months on end, skating that be dren’s hospital to speak to Doctor ner together that tears. ties when a big fat juicy turkey had gan in November and lasted u ntil Grayson, who received her little pa Dora asked Doc That stop not till their race la tients In tbe room occupied a prominent place on the March, snow drifts th at reached al- run. tor Scott 'to her tittle apartment, right across the festival board. But after reading in most-any height one might mention where they talked before the cheerful And centuries sing, “Thy will corridor from the the paper the price Mr. T u rk de were the exceptional occurrences in glow of the open fire In her lilvng be done!” s m a l l otwratlng manded for hlg presence at the tab grandfather's day as they are today,” room. room where be "I've always wondered Just why a le it was very near a cinch that he the Foundation declares. “One mild worked two hours girl like you studied medicine?" lie would be among those absent when w inter starts thel rumor th a t the every morning. In wa pulled our chair up to the belt overcoat manufacturer« had better go all bis life he bad came out of the door of the apartment ventured to begin. “I ’ve wondered, too,” said Dora. "It never known a house. line extender. Some times however. into the Palm Beach suit business, all seemed so wonderful and so easy “Are you going to dinner?” be woman doctor be Lady Luck taka a hand in the des while an extremely cold W inter is fore; be tried to asked, and Dora admitted that she In medical college. But now I’m prac tinies of mortals and this time she dubbed as a good old fashioned w in ticing by myself, I wonder, too—” i m a g i n e , b u t wa* going out In search of soifiethlng did not w ait to knock but opened ter. One explanation for this Is that “It seemed," Talmadge went on, "as c o u ld not con to ea t “But you don't care about the If you were the sort of girl—the sort the door and walked rig ht in. Lady J memory |g trick y and recalls the ex- clude, what sort old, traditional Thanksgiving feast?” of girl that would want to marry— Luck proved to be W . T. Botkins jeept tonal rather than the average, of p e r s o n she she queried. “It’s funny how people that Ju« couldn’t escape marriage—” have clung to the tradition.” who presented the editor w ith a nine Another is th at modern llM ng has must be. “But 1 never wanted to marry any “Isn't It?“ he said, and then, “As ‘‘Clinic Is closed pound turkey Tuesday. Thursday we taken the edge off the extreme wea- one but a doctor" she began, and we both seem to be going out In search tomorrow,” he re are going to indulge in a big feedither. A snowfall that our forefather* then stopped In confusion. marked the Wed of nourishment, what do you say to and we’ll bet there won’t even be would have' trodden under foot for And this gave Talmadge Scott the nesday b e f o r e combining forces?” cue for hl* first and hut proposal. the gobble left when chairs are days now is soveled away before we Ten minutes later they were seated Thanksgiving. " I backed away from the table. M r. j get up in the morning. Better heat- suppose you will have dinner with opposite each other In a white-tiled Botkina ig receiving a good price f o r , <ng too, make* us fe d the low tem- friends.” eating establishment. Dora had de the birds this year and has made perature leas, and ice refrigerating “Thanksgiving dinner?” she queried. clined Talmadge's invitation to go to shipments to S w ift ft CO., Portland. plants and electric fans makes ex “I am afraid I don’t fedi in a very a more expensive place. t o , l i t i . M eC lar» New spaper Syndicate.; “A salad Is all I want,” said Dora. thankful mood. Pm thousands of tremes of heat more endurable.” From a tray being borne past them W hile tbe Weather is constantly miles from home. Do you still believe Not an Ancestor FARM BUREAU WILL ENTERTAIN ehanging from one year to another, in turkey and cranberry sauce and came whiffs of aromatic turkey and 1925'* turkey* are dcacendanta of pumpkin pie?” stuffing, that somehow made Tal Aztec fowl*, and not the wild species The Farm Bureau assisted by the big climatic changes are too gradual madge's mouth water. Yet he said, 'bat the Puritans ate. explains a Field “I t ’» a pretty myth,” he said. ente'rtafn i to °bnerved ,B *be lifetim e of one Neighborhood club w ill I f Dora bad been a keen observer looking Instantly at Dora, “Yes, a museum wizard. So long as our or even a hundred generations, the she might have noticed that a look of salad and tea. I think that'* wbat I December IS w ith a' program and Thanksgiving bird t* a descendant and i Foundation states. Scientists figure disappointment passed over Tal shall have, too.” feed to " be held at the Columbia not an ancestor, we shall accept this th at the climate o ftbia continent madge Scott's face, and If be bad been So they sapped together, and some discovery with equanimity. One year school home. The program and de has not changed In some ten million a mind reader be might have been how os they ate Dora felt a funny we remember trying to carve an tails of arrangements w ill be pulish- years, not since th e passing o f the aware of her own disappointment. sobbing sensation—as of Intense home original Aztec eagle, and Judging by ed In The Herald next week. glacial period, and probably w ill not Not being so gifted they parted with sickness and disappointment, and Tal the nicks It put in the knife. Ids a brief farewell. madge felt a curious sort of melan name was Iztalkatzopotlpcc. * for another ten million. Talmadge Scott knew where Dora choly. Oa B u te of Q uality Grayson lived. All Thanksgiving day After It was over and Talmadge The farm er w ho is wins w ill grade CATHOLIC be thought of her. In spite of efforts bad paid tbe Insignificant check, they and produce high quality of every FLAN BAZAAR to put her out of his mind. Several went together as far ae tbe corner and thing. Every day buyers demand times he found excuse to peas her there Dora left him. To the Turk more grading and consumers demand apartment. At balf-past six, as he felt Thirty rotoutes later Talmadge Homo p ra y , to m e play . more from retdMWw.: 15 tg-only fa lr-j The A lta r Society w ill hold a for the first time since breakfast tbe Scott, after some irresolution, entered T h io th o n k fa r i day. of food. be agata walked by her he Sterling Itotd. neen th at products be paid tor ae- Baxaai* December the fifth a t th« Hdtt.io OVOB II*’ VO to WUI It was then that he was re- tbe 4nwd waiter to le a d P. on... tUUt mu Jr. cording to quality and market price. (Hermiston Produce warehouse. This tVc’re her«- lio way. to W taMe near a - __ . - -----. -------------- for Ull his diligent waiting. th in g that w in make first grade. bazaar w ill con I l f i i f i rttr f l i ' h * T m * of a cooked food j far p , p * , Loiuloo (grayeon Just then He woe shoot ti —Allan:,* u* Mp'iijk'P not ba paid tor a t a second sale, a rummage sale and a sale of a grad* price. Q uality basis I , a Just lim ited number o f aprons and fancy The farm er who produces work suitable for Christmas gifts. J. D. W aghom and Fred Prsnn Hermiston defeated Pilot Rock The high school Is planning on a Bazaar opens at >;M F. M. roturad Saturday for the valley. Saturday teat— score 24 to fi. minstrel «how for early next month. . ;r . t. -by W. H. PIERCE Thanksgiving a n k s c iv i, 5 Jana Osb J N o . 12 HERMISTON RESIDENTS AT UMATILLA COUNTY TAR TEND DINNER AT UMATILLA RATIO TO THIS YEAR Quite a number of Hermiston peo State Tax Commission Fixe* County ple attended th© progressive dinner Ratio.. .Gilliam County Highest or trip around the world, given by In the State of Oregon. the Ladies Aid of the community Gilliam county'* tax ratio of as church at Um atilla last Friday night. sessed valuation to actual value la Those who were present from this the highest of any county in the city were: Mr. and Mrs. W illiam stale thia year, being 90 per ce n t., Shaar, Mr. and Mrs. Herachel H ia tt, Throughout the state the ratios show Mr. and Mra. Harold MeKeen, Mr. a slight decrease from last year. a“ d Mrs. Dave Mlttlesdorf, M r. and The ratio for Multnomah county Mrs. Curtis Simons, M r. and Mrs. which haa approximately one-third Otto Pierce. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Moll, of th© assessable property in the state Mr. and Mrs. Oron Felthouse, M r. was fixed at 54 as compared w ith and Mrs Stanley Campbell, Andy 55 In the year 1924. In Clatsop Kern and Misa Ada Soueaon, MM. county the ratio was decreased from Lxjis Schultz. O. K. Mudge, J. A. 51 to 78, w hile in Columbia county Reeves and daughter Neli and Opal the ratio was decreased from 76 to Dahlman. 71. The Harney county ratio was ................. Increased from 60 to 63. -» ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ft# « « * A large number of public hearings ♦ STATE MARKET AGENT $ attended by representatives of va r » DEPARTMENT ♦ ious corporations and unities wer0 ♦ « held prior to fixing the tax ratios. The following summary shows the ratios for the year 1925 by counties (C. E. Speno, M arket Agent, 716 Court House, Portland.) as compared with those for the year 1924. 1925 1924 The Canadian Way Apparently the department of ag- County— per cent Baker ...... 70 72 ricultrue of Canada considers it as Benton ...........................................50 61 much its mission to help sell ae to Clackamas ....................................60 61 help raise, and it has purchased 25.- Clatsop .........................................78 81 000 barrelg of Ontario's big apple Columbia .a ............................. 71 76 crop to sell abroad, returning this Coos ................... 60 61 profit^ to the growers.' The govern Crook ........... (.._............. ............. 58 57 ment w ill also put on an advertising 80 campaign for the apples, both a t Curry ...... * ....................... ..... 80 Deschuteg .................. 46 49 home and In other countries. Douglas .........................................65 66 Gilliam ...........................................90 89 Costs, Middle Profits, Taxation Grant ................... 71 70 One doesn't have to be a fanner 60 Varney .............. :. .................. 63 Io know that farm ing has been the 64 Hood R iv e r,...................... - a .....64 poorest paid of all industries fo r 61 Jackson .............. - ...................... 61 tome years, says the State M arket Jefferson ....... :....... - ............. ,.—71 71 Agent. Operating costs have reach 67 I losephlne ....................................67 ed the sky, taxee are steadily mount, 70 Klam ath ................. —..... ...........66 ing, while the price of products P»td 69 L a k e .......................- ..................... 69 to the farmer have not anywhere Lane ............................................... 55 53 kpt pace. No matter how abundant Lincoln ........................................ 85 87 our harvest» may be, or how great 63 Linn ...................... - i —.................63 the output of mines, forests or fish Malheur ........................................ 69 56 eries, state wide prosperity cannot Marlon ................. 66 56 come if farming coats, taxatlou and MorTOw ........... 75 76 middle profit toils rise in proportion, 56 Multnomah .................................54 says Mr. Spence. I f it takes about 44 Polk .............. .................-.............i-44 all the average farmer receives to 84 Sherman ....... _............................ 84 pny his taxes and operating expenses, 86 be Is more of a lia b ility than anaet Tillamook ......................... .....80 U m atilla ........ «9 70 to his community and the many small Union ............................................. 78 79 agricultural cities that depend large- 68 W allowa ............ , ~...............69 y on farmer buying. Statistic« nt Wasco ...........................................73 73 big crops and outputs mean little to 47 Washington ....... _.....................46 general properity when producers get 76 Wheeler ......... —...........................78 iut one-third ot the price consumers 56 Yam hill .......... .............................64 pay for th e products. Henry Ford tells the farmer he must cut the Taking Off the Robes cost of production to remedy thia Two co-operative organizations of condition, while Herbert Hoover strength and standing now permit telle him he must produce lees. members to w ithdraw and market E ither of these men know that w hat outside if they care to. They are ^he farmers really need for relief the Pacific Co-Operative Poultry as is a Just system of taxation, based sociation of Portland and the Tobac on Income— ability to pay— and pow co Growers association of Hopkins erful selling agencies to cut down ville, Ky. This course may be taken enormous middle-handling expenses by associations after they have be and profits. Given this relief and come thoroughly established and th® same ta riff protection manufac powerful enough to be big market- turers thrive under, farm ing would pince factors, says the State M arket ’>e a profitable Industry and business Agent, but u ntil they are in this of the whole state would prosper position and strong enough to w ith with It. We don’t produoe too stand the figh ting strength of pri much, we consume too little. vate interests which attack moat co operatives, an iron clad selling con tract is absolutely essential Neither BENNION RETURNS FROM HEARING AT SAN FRANCISCO the egg association or the tobacco pool could have attained their pres- Testimony offered before the in tracts. j j jjl terstate commerce commission nt the hearing at San Francisco that began Certified Seed Pay* Novomber 16 was largely in rebuttal Results from nearly twelve thous to the testimony offered by railroads and test plats of certified vs. non- In the hearing at Chicago September crtlfled seed potatoes planted in parts 8, according to Fred Bennlon, whg of this country and Canada, show an represented the Pendleton Commer average Increase per acre of 46.4 cial association, the Vlregoit Wool bushels per acre in favor of the cer Growers' association and the county tified seed. Oregon is fast coming farm bureau. to the front ag a certified seed state. The Bcrlea of hearings now being California being a big buyer. held by the commission la in answer o the Smith-Hoke resolution adopt ed In th® last session of congress Far Bach in Hiatory which called for an investigation of The great cathedrals of England la ‘ he whole rate structure w ith the many Instances replace former edifices idea of relieving agriculture of some that were erected by the early Chris of its burdens. The carriers then tians who formed part of the ancient naked for a five pr ent incrase in F-ritlsh church, und which were later rates on western roads. destroyed by fire or otherwise, a writer In the Cbic.sn hearing tbe rull- In the Montreal Family Herald relates. For Instance, Canterbury cathedral rondi pree> :il d -.lie n e e In an <- th:. • -'-Tr'i '»ure in now wa* first built In <105, on the site of fort to sh' an old church dating from very early profitable end is c.blc to pay i-lgher ages. It was destroyed by fire In 100", atta. tn D 'ir he hearing a' and Archbishop Langfanc, on taking Novem i r 9. n I ’ ’ Rocky pr« office I* 1070, undertook the rebuilding mount' ' i d; i le t 1 sen'rd t oil- of an entirely new church. This lasted is to ‘ tic r-'r.tJr-i c." fr« 'g h t nnttl about 1100, when tinder Anslem, mor Laagfranc’s successor, Erulf rebuilt rates to 1’ sir , •• ne At th f fan r i an d * - '.e- ing TS the eastern part. A fire destroyed most of the portion of the building rallroe'S wet- .’jprt ■ io J. Cha”1- In 1174, and from that year William bers <f commerce wer in cities of Hens took up the work of rebuild fom Heat He to San D i-T ". S p o t’.no. ing until 11T8, when, on his suffering Pol ’, Pocatello, Fait L a te City and severe Injury by falling from a scaf fold, another William, commonly dis other clti s were repre I’ nted. The tinguished a* “the Englishman," cur slate utilities fimmleslons of a maj ried on the work and completed It In ority of the states were present. 11A4. Many site mt Ions and change* Mr. Bennlon testified as to the have been made during Ilia ensuing cost of producing wheat, beef, cat centuries. I might mention that si tle. lambs and wool and also told rly as flfifl. Theodore of Tarsus, of 'of thp general financial condition the city of St. Paul, was elected sreh- oj) of Canterbury, not appointed, of fruit growers. The Oregea publia both tbe king of Nortlminbrla and the service commission was active In the king at Kent acquiescing In his elec hearing. J. N. Tc«l of Portland re tion. He was the first archbishop te presented the Portland Chamber of receive the allegiance ot tlie whole of Commerce and a lumberman's organ tbo Englisti church. ization.— East Oregonian. Engliih Cathedral» Go