The HeraUHiemM Close to the Heart and Mind of the Umatilla Project. ©be wrmMstt îùralh T U DAIRY COW CAR HMD RO BETTER ROWS TSAR OR AR IRRIGATED TARR OR THIS PROJECT. VOL. XXI HERMISTON, ORE OT THE BEST POULTRY DISTRICTS ANYWHERE IN THE NORTHWEST HERMISTON, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON. THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1927 RO. 3« LOCALS GET GOOSE EG6 IN FIFTH GAME! Walla Walla Shuts Out AL JENNINGS Spheroid Maulers From Here by 8 to 0 Score. itBAPTISTS TO MEET Auxiliary Seeks Clothing A request for clothing that can be either by children or adults has i*vn made by the American Legion auxiliary of Hermiston. The cloth ing will be sent to Portland for the use of veterans who are in the hospi COUNTY ASSOCIATION TO HOLD tal, or for members of their families. SEVENTEEN" PRESENTED TO A The auxiliary will mend clothing SESSIONS, MAY 13-15 IARGE AUDIENCE that is not in repair. Those wish All Baptist Churches in Umatilla ing to make donations should call either Mrs. W. L. Hamm or Mrs. Wil Work of Cast in School's Most liam Shaar. County Will Aid in Programs FRESHMEN SCORE IN THEIR CLASS PLAY HERE THREE OATS Pendleton Plans Race M eet 'With Purses o f $ 2 0 0 0 II TUESDAY GIVEN OVER TO CELE JOHN K. DAVIS Youthful Class Wins Praise at Local Church. Blue Mountain League Standing Walla Walla ................. 4 .800 Pendleton ............. 4 .800 Herm iston........................ 1 .200 Indians ............................. 1 .200 TWO COUNTIES JOLLIFÏ ON MCKAY DAM COMPLETION Notable From Big House. BRATION Speakers Participate In Programs at Reservoir and Friday, Saturday and Sunday, May 13, 14 and 15 are the dates and the in Hermiston to Mark Baptist church of Hermiston the And then in the school year of Big Event. place where the twenty-second an- 1926-27, after ¿he upper classes of nual,convention of the Umatilla Bap Sunday’s Results the high school had set a high stand tist association w ill held for 1927. HIGH LIGHTS Walla Walla 8, Hermiston 0. ard of excellence in presenting class Commissioner M ad of the bureau Members of the local church have Buckarooa 7, Indians 0. been busy for some time preparing May 20, 21 and 22 are Dates Set plays, the youngest class In school of teclamation aftei seeing undevel came along and by the quality of its for the affair which will have the oped land under the f ed canal be For big Cards Given Undej work done In presenting Both Tark support of Baptist churches all over tween Stanfield and Hermiston Tues The West Enders took another one Ington’s classic, "Seventeen.” show El^s Auspices. day advocated watering th? land the county and from some churches on the nose Sunday at the hands of ed its ability to keep up the pace from the feed canal. Hermiston has beyond the boundaries of this county. the strong Walla Walla team In a Pendleton. Ore., May 12— Pendle And while the freshman actors Al Jennings, former Oklahoma out been trying for several y:ars, w ith A local woman, Miss Clara G. Hall, game played in the Washington city. law, who has been elected ...syor of ton gives promise of being a regular pleased with the quality of their pro Is clerk and treasurer of the associa out success, to bring about this de The ecore was 8 to 0. duction they also set a record of Crescent City, Cal. tion. George Mason Is moderator little-Tia Juana on May 20, 21 and velopment. The area affected in Out of a total of 20 hits made dur and Charles Betts, assistant modera 22, when horses famed for their more than $100 house. The play cludes about 2500 acres of the best ing the game, the West Enders gar was under the direction of Miss Eva speed on many tracks will be here tor. land in the district. nered eight, but the Bears played Randall, class advisor, assisted by Preachers and laymen will partici for the Elks race meet at the Round A specialist from the bureau of re errorless ball and so did not help the Miss Jessie Brierley. pate in the program that has been Up grounds. clamation w ill he sent from W ashing locala, and the West Enders added up The play won its right to be con Everyone loves a horse race, arranged for three days. Each of the ton in the near future to study the a total of five errors that were fac whether It is Just the common "hogs” sldered successful by reason of uni larger churches ha3 been assigned problems of the Stanfield district re tors In four of' the runs thé Bears formly good work by all members of special work for the convention. variety, or a real race by glossy, fleet lative to canal enlargements and scored. limbed horses trained t exert them the cast, rather than by the out drainage. Montesano. Wash. — Two informa The convention will open Friday Walla Walla started scoring In the selves to the limit of speed. The standing acting of any one member. jooirwoos & Senator Steiw r and Representa- first Inning on a single by Sweet, two tions charging W. J. Patterson, ex morning at 10 and close Sunday af Pendleton meet w ill be marked Picking out stars would be hard VodtKood manager and cashier of the now in ternoon at 5 o’clock. ive Sinnott pledged themselves to fielder’s choices, and a single by The address of welcome w ill be ex by the presence of horses which have work and an injustice to the rest of do everything in th?ir power to se O’Rourke. In the third Yenney solvent Hayes & Hayes bank of Rodney Davis probably John K. Davis, American consul, cure action from the federal govern Aberdeen with receiving money on tended by Rev. A. J. Ware, pastor won honors at many meets. Every the cast. smacked out a triple and later stole race is to be a sw ift and snappy had an edge on the boys by reason who was rescued with hie family and ment that will make possible th? most Viorne for another marker. In the deposit in an insolvent bank were fil of the local church. The response of the excellence of his interpretation other Americana In 4he recent fight economical use of McKay water. event. The purses total $2,000. ed in superior court here by Prosecut will be by Charles Betts. fourth Rypzinski jjoled a triple and Among those who will bring horses of the part of William Sylvanus Bax ing at Nanking, China. ing Attorney A. M. Wade. A war -ant The annual sermon Friday morn Governor Patterson advocated a scored on Wetzel’s single. Beck was here will be George Drumheller of ter, but some of his less exeprienced ?ontinnance of th? practice of diver- safe on Phelps’ error. Swedt and was Issued and bail set at $2500 In ing at 11:30 will be delivered by Walla Walla, one of the best known fellow actors pressed him closely for iification on proj ct farms and the Brassier struck out. Wetzel scored each case by Judge Campbell. It is Rev. E. M. Bollinger. Friday after race horse men in the west; Henry honors.. expected that Patterson will be ar noon beginning at 2:45 a woman’s xtension of the practice as far as when Yenney got a two base hit. Maxine Avery went over well in meeting is to be held. Several talks Trowbridge, of John Day; Earl Far possible. The Bears added four more in the rested immediately. her part as the younger sister of Penalty for the offense charged in by women from different churches row of Ontario and Omer SImkins, of Senator Steiw, r pledged himself to sixth. Wetzel singled, and Beck was William. Shirley Brownson was Yakima, work in behalf of the Umatilla Rap- safe on Berry’s error. Shipley made case of conviction is imprisonment in in the county have been arranged. There will be no relay races and consistently good in her role of Friday evening has been given over As project. an error that gave Sweet a berth, the penitentiary for not more than no' harness races. The racing pro mother of William and Jane. Jane ten years or a fine of not more than to a big layman’s meeting with M. L. Washington, D. C. - The state de Several speakers called attention and the bases were full. Brassier I’hompson of Pendleton presiding. gram has not yet been outlined, but Warner succeeded in interpretiting partment advised the British govern to the necessity of settling the n .w struck out, and Yenney filled the $10,000. the difficult role of the "baby talk Patterson has been the outstanding T he Pendleton church will furnish will include the derby, the half mile, ment that the United States regard: lands that are now subject to irri breach by banging one Into the daisy the three-quarter mile, etc. The lady” to the satisfaction of the audi the recent CfUraspondence betweei gation with the completion of McKay patch for three fourths of a circuit, financial figure of Grays harbor for the special music for this session, and races will begin promptly at 1:30 P. ence. Marian Henderson as May Secretary Mellon and President Hlfc lam and the creation of its reser scoring the three men ahead of him. many years and has been active In 'several of the speakers will be from M. Prices will range from $1.10, Parcher was satisfactory, and Albert ben of Princeton university on wa voir. Pendleton. most of the industrial and commercial He scored on O’Rourke’s grounder to Officers for the coming year wll general admission, to $2.20 for box Kennings in the role of George Coop debts as a “purely domestic discus Fetzer. Wright struck out, retiring development. er, the boy with the car who breezed sion and does not desire to engage it be elected at the business session Sat seats. The communities from Pendleton the side. along and had his own way most of any formal diplomatic exchanges ot urday afternoon at 1:15. to Boardman co-operated in a cele REFUGEES TOTAL 338,000 The West Enders threatened in the the time, acted the part in convinc the subject." The young people’s session will be FUNERAL FOR CIVIL WAR bration Tuesday when the complet seventh when Hiatt, Shipley and Fet ing fashion. The views of the Washington gov ion of McKay dam was observed In a Harvey zer got singles in a row. Hiatt was Number Expected to Pass 350,000 held Sunday afternoon. VETERAN IS HELD TODAY Other members of the cast includ ernment was contained in a not« Iocke, state president of the B. Y. P. Very Shortly. series of activities th at’ started at caught at the plate when he tried to ed Billy Felthouse as Johnny Wat transmitted to the British embassy 1:30 In the afternoon at the dam Memphis, Tenn.—Flood sufferers re U., w ill be the chief speaker. score on a throw from center field. Amerean Legion in Charge of Ser son, Marlin Earnheart as Mr. Bax It was in reply to a note handed th It is expected that large crowds ceiving aid from the Red Cross in the and were concluded at 11 o’clock Longhorn struck out, and the oppor ter, Russell Blessing as Jos Bullitt, department by the British charge d that evening In Hermiston. vices for B. H. Parsons tunity was long gone when Berry seven states affected by the disas w ill be in Hermiston for the various Elbert Hutchison as Genesis, the affaires, acting in the absence fron Notables from far and near gava trous Mississippi valley inundations, cessions. flew to center. colored man who was employed by thp Washington of Ambassador Howard Who Died Tuesday. numbered 338.000 with the Louisiana impetus to the day of Jollification Baxters. George Bcisse as Mr. Par which challenged the accuracy of i Box score and summary: B accalaureate services figures still incomplete. >y their presence and the use of their cher, Bessie Madden as Ethel Boke statement by Mr. Mellon that Great AB R H PO A E Funeral services were held this New evacuations are going forward talents. Talks were ni&de at the ' Hermiston— TO BE HELD SUNDAY NIGHT afternoon at 2 o'clock in the Metho and Dorothy Straw as Mary Brooks. Britain's debt payments to the Unite» brief ceremonies at the dam by Gov in the face of rising waters along sev A ballet dance number by Thelma States would not constitute a drain on Woodwar, rf. If. ... 4 0 3 0 1 * dist Episcopal church wi$h Rev. S. eral rivers in south central Lousiana ernor Patterson, Commissioner Mead, ... 4 0 1 0 2 0 Baccalaureate services for the Hamrick in charge for Benjamin H. Kinley betwen acts was well receiv British economic resources. Representative Sinnott and others. and the list of the needy is expected Mittlesdorf, cf ... 4 0 0 2 0 0 graduating class of the Hermiston Parsons, Civil war veteran, who pass ed by the big audience. Tho statement ot the treasury sec In the program at Hermiston follow to reach 350,000 soon. ghesely, c ...... ... 2 0 0 12 0 0 graduating class of the Hermiston ed away at the family residence early retary was a part of a letter written ing the banquet, the solemnity of the The total of vaccinations for ty high school w ill be hold Sunday eve Tuesday morning, Death came after COLONIZATION PLAN TO BE .. 4 0 1 9 0 1 by him to Dr. Hibben in reply to the dedicatory services earlier in the day phoid reached 119,000 persons, with ning, May 15, at 8 o’clock in the several years of Illness. .. 4 0 2 0 2 1 those for smallpox 108,000. contention ot members of the Prince was largely forgotten and gave way CARRIED OUT ON LANDS HERE Fetzer, 2b Methodist Episcopal church. Rev .. 4 0 1 0 5 0 Mr. Parsons was born in Peru, ______ ton and Columbia university faculties to flashes of wit from the lips of A. J. Ware of the Baptist church will Indiana, May 24, 1847, and lacked .. 3 0 0 1 0 « A colonization plan whereby he! that there should b<! “ revl8,on ot the speakers. California Japanese Schools Win. Phelpe, p make the chief address of the ser two week's of being 80 years old at expects to be responsible for placing debt settlements. .. 1 0 0 0 5 1 In the interval between the formal Sacramento, Cal. — Restrictions Berry, p .. 2 0 0 0 8 1 vice and w ill be assisted by Rev. S, the time of his death. He was the parts of the day’s program, a cara against private foreign language Hamrick of the Methodist church who third son of John and Priscilla Par many families on land that is sub London.—Expressing great misgiv van of about two score persons vis schools, Imposed by the state legis ject to Irrigation under McKay wat 30 0 8 24 23 5 w ill give the invocation and read the sons. When he was eight years old lature In 1921, were held to be in vio scripture lesson. ers near Hermiston has been worked ing because of (he divergence of opin ited lands In three projects and saw Walla Walia- both his parents died. At the age of out by N. Pasto of Portland, who was ion and estrangement of sentiment developed and raw lands, visited lation of the constitution of the United The processional will be played by 16 he enlisted in the 13th Indiana Sweet, cf ....... .. 5 2 1 4 1 0 States, in an opinion handed down by growing up In regard to the war debts, three representative farms, heard Elba Hamrick and Ruth Dense! Cavalry and served until November here for the celebration Tuesday that the British government, in a note to Brasste, ss ..... .. 5 0 0 2 2 0 Attorney-Genaral Webb. from the lips of the farmers on the Approxi marked completion of the dam ♦Yenney, 3b ... .. 5 2 3 3 2 0 mately 200 schools, involving 500 Following the Invocation a chorus 18. 1865, whew he was discharged Mr. Pasto has purchased 80 acres ' ,he Vnlted States, challenged the sc- places the records of results being O’Rourke, c ...... .. 4 0 1 6 1 0 teachers, are affected by the attorney- will sing "Tile Lost Chord.” After at Vicksburg, Mississippi. of bottom land up Blitter creek which curacy of the statement March 17 by secured, inspected the lambs owned the scripture reading Miss Seyler and Wright, lb ..... . 4 0 0 11 1 0 general’s With a younger brother he started he considers Is excellently adapted to Andrew W. Mellon, secretary of the by members of the purebred sheep opinion. Fully three- M cCollis............ .. 4 0 1 1 0 0 fourths of these are Japanese schools. Mias Waterman w ill sing "O Jesus, west shortly after the war going In gardening and will show it to gar- 1 United States treasury, that Great club of Hermiston and listened to the Thou Art Standing.” . 3 1 I 0 0 0 to the two Dakotas and then to deners now living In the Willamette Britain's debt payments to the United talks made by the boys about their Wetzel, 2b 4 2 3 0 1 0 Canada Allows Motor Tourist 90 Days Montana. In 1874 he went to Iowa valley. States will not constitute a drain on lam bs. SENIORS TO PRESENT CLASS Beck, p .... . 3 1 0 0 7 0 and in that Btate February 14, 1877, In his brief talk at the dam Com- "I have a lot of friends who want British economic resources. Ottawa, Ont. ■ — Regulations extend DAY PROGRAM WEDNESDAY he was united In wedlock to Robic to buy land, and I like this country . 1 0 1 0 0 0 ing to 90 days the period for which mirsiontr Mead praised the original B. Franklin who survives him. ity and versatility of Jack Savage of and feel confident it will be jimt what motor tourists may remain in Canada SHORT NEWS NUGGETS The senior class is making plans Total ............... 38 8 12 27 15 0 without deposit of cash bonds haw; Of the five children born to this they are seeking,” Mr. Pasto said. the reclamation bureau engineering for a special program that will be ♦Ran for O'Rourke in first. union four survive. Fred F.. Bert F., “I expect to bring several prospect A congressional delegation will staff who de. igned McKay dam and been placed In effect by the Canadian presented at the high school, Wed Maude Gulsinger and Benjamin O. Earned runs, Hermiston 0, Walla customs department. ive buyers from the valley within a make a week’s tour of inspection of also lauded Ralph Connor who had nesday evening. May 13. The program Psreons of Hermiston.. A son, James Walla 4. Three base hits, Shipley, few day« and believe that they will the flooded area of Ihe Mississippi charge of construction. valley beginning May 29. Yenney (2 ), Repp.First base on balls, Canadian Farmers Mostly Owner*. will be for the purpose of commemo Roy Parsons, died several years ago. want to settle here.” The commissioner said that he felt rating class day. The class w ill is Herbert F. Lemp, mayor of Boise, more confident of the ultimate suc Phelps 1, Beck 2. Left on bases, Ottawa, Ont. — More than 85 per to be read, the history, a prophecy Other relatives surviving Include a brother, Francis Parsons, Holdrouk, Idaho, and crack polo player, died cess of Oregon's development work Hermiston 7, Walla Walla 7. First cent of all the farms in Canada arv. Mrs. Barnard in Hospital. base on errors, Walla Walla 3. - Two owned outright by those who live on and a skit will also be presented. A Nebraska, a step sister, Mrs. Anna Mrs. S. H. Barnard Is a patient In from head Injuries suffered in a prac ns a result of his visit to the stat« rdial invitation has been extended White, Median, Kansas: and a niece, base hits. Woodward, Yenney. Struck them, according to a bulletin issued than lie ever had before. St. Anthony's hospital where she*Is ties polo game. Mrs. Minnie Hhellhart who live« in recovering after a surgical operation The American Legion will have e* out, by Phelps 3, Berry 7, Beck 4. by the dominion bureau of statistics to the public to attend. At the conclusion of the talks. Indiana. Double plays, Wetzel to Brassier to performed Friday morning by Dr. J. elusive Use Of tile liner Leviathan to Governor Patterson manipulated the The O. A. C. advises the use of The funeral services were In charge L. Sears. She probably will be in carry Its members to the Paris cod mechuuism that partially lifted the Wright. Innings pitched, by Phelps THE MARKETS. land plaster ag a stimulant in corn of the Hermiston post of the Ameri ventlon next September, if it can se needle valves and released a stream 3. Berry 6, Beck 9. Hitts: Off Phelps Portland. growing, only a small amount In each can Legion, and burial was in the the hospital for two weeks before re cure enough passengers by June 10 7 in 3 Innings, Berry 5 in 6 innings. of white foaming water that dashed Wheat—Big Bend bluestem. $1.53; hill being required. turning home. Her condition Is re local cemetery to justify the trip. Berry relieved Phelps in the 4th inn hard white. $1.61; federation, sestern Itself into spray as It leaped from ported to be very satisfactory. Denver was officially awarded the the mouth of the tunnel and churned ing, 3 on bases and no outs. Stolen white, $1.47; soft white, $1.37; hard James Gordon Bennett ba'ioon race« and addled in the channel below. bases. Yenney 2, McCallin. Sacrifice winter, $1.44; northern spring. >1.46; for 1927. The international event, Cheers greeted the appearance of th« hit, Blakely. Umpire, Jefferson western red, $1.43. with entrants from tho United States, roaring torrent. Time, 1:55. Scoreis Pierce. H ay-» Alfalfa, $20020.50; valley Belgium. Germany, France, Italy. Eng timothy, $18018.50; eastern Oregon An event not Included on the pro Score by innings: land and Switzerland, will be staged gram develop.d when Commissioner timothy, $21022. Hermiston .... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 September 10. Bntterfat—40c. Mead saw the body of raw land ly Bears .......... 1 0 1 2 0 4 0 -8 Thirty warships, representing eight ing below the Cold Springs feed can Eggs—Ranch. 19022c. nations and manned by 86$7 officers al and above the A line of the Her Cattle—Steers, good. $9.25010.15. Smith Gets Point« and men exclusive Of marines, are miston district and Insisted that the Hogs — Medium to choice, $9.25© At the county traek and field meet stationed at Shanghai at present, ac land be Irrigated by the use of water 11.25. In Pendleton recently Jack Smith ac cording to the North China Herald. out of the feed canal. Sheep—Lambs, medium to choice, quired two firsts and a second and This force Is supplemented by 18.000 t llO H . E ffo;ls to realize such a result won 13 tgjata and a banner for high land troop« guarding the boundaries have been made from time to time Seattle. w point Individual In a school of second of the international settlement. Wheat—Soft white, western whit«, for several years by Hermiston men. claaa sis«.« Smith’s firsts were in northern spring. $1.48H; hard winter, and the commissioner urged that the the shotptft, 39 feet 10 1-2 inches; Ten Dead in Kansas Tornado. work be done when he went over the the Javelin’ 143 feet, eight inches; western red, $I.47>4; Big Bend bine- stem, |1.S5; Big Bend dark northern Hutihlnson, Kan.—Ten are known land for the rlrst time Tuesday. The his second was in the discus. 93 1-2 spring, $1.54; Big Bend dark hard to be dead and probably a hundred arfa Includes about 2500 acres of feet. He presented the banner to winter, $1.53. or more are Injured as a result of the land of the best type found In the Ir the high school to be added to the H a/—Alfalfa, $25; Umothy, P. 8., tornadoes which swept northeastward rigated district, and Ita development collection of the school. $21 through Rarbe. Kingman. Reno and has long been desired. Batter—Creamery, 42c. McPherson count Tea last week. Prob E. P. Dodd, toastmaster, recounted Cutworm Control Easy Eggs—Ranch. 23O28c. ably 800 residences along the path of a brief history of the building of the damage is being done this Cattle—Steers, choice. $9.50010.21. the twisters were damaged. Many of dam from the Inception of the Idea spring by the activity of cutworms, Hogs—Prime, $10 40011 40. them were completely demolished of constructing It In 1917 through according to the county agent. Con •poke ns. while an enormous amount of dam the varlon« stages until the appro trol of this pest la relatively easy to Cattle—Steers, good. $8 750*1« age was done otherwise. priations were secured and the work secure by means of poison bran, and n ogs—Good, $10 50010 65 actually begun- H« praised both the county agent expressed a desire Senator McNary and Representative ........ . ............. Dr. and Mrs. F. V. Prime have to aid anyone wanting to mix and Sinnott for the work they did In mak- «uncey Depew on hi. nmety-tliird birthday W. L. Hamm waa a visitor last er« viví ng cake from New York Toonr Ileniit.lie .,n been in Portland and valley pointa put out the week. He went down with Jack Biggs for about a week. (Continued on Page Thr««) ABERDEEN BANKER MUST FACE CHARGES BRITAIN OBJECTS . TO MELLON LETTE! t