The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, May 19, 1927, Image 2

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    Cilicia Ranked High
A favorite phrase among speakers
Is "the United States of Europe.” The
Idee Is attractive, and should develop
topics of world Importance on which
the states of Europe ran abeolutely
WOMEN U N
NOW DO MODE
Unknown Joldicr
B. F. Leisch of Marshfield will con­
struct the Port Orford stucco high
school building of four rooms tor >16,-
000.
Two hundred and two of the 4500
voters of Klamath Falls defeated the
Brief Resume of Happenings of proposed >300,000 bond issue which
would have financed the construction
the Week Collected for
of a trunk line sewage system.
Our Readers.
Noah Baker of Newport, who took
gold from the sands of the Oregon
beaches 18 years ago, has returned to
Virgil Kruschke has been appointed
the same spot to make his dream
deputy state fruit inspector at Silver-
come true. He is using the old-time
ton.
sluice trough, and his first clean-up
Dates for Roseburg's annual Chau­ showed about an ounce of the yellow
tauqua have been set for July 16 to metal.
21 inclusive.
Salem organizations have been re­
The 36th annual assembly of the quested by Polk county citizens to
Willamette ITesbyterial was held In assist In the creation of the Falls
Woodburn la3t week.
City-Valsetz highway improvement
Plans are maturing fo» the annual district, for construction of a highway
Strawberry Carnival, to be held In from Falls City westward to Valsetz,
where It would Intersect the Roose­
Roseburg May 27 and 28.
Wapinitia cattlemen are starting to velt coast highway.
Eggs twice as large as .the ordinary
drive their herds into the MouDt Hood
national forest reserve for summer sort are received daily from one of
the hens owned by Mrs. E. W. Gustaf-
pasturage.
The contract for rocking the 6.6 sen of Grand Ronde. They are all
miles of the Shea Hill-Cascadia sec­ double-yolked and average one-fourth
of a pound in weight. The ambitious
tion of the Santiam highway was
hen, which Is more than a year old,
awarded recently.
Is a Black Jersey Giant.
Three different assay laboratories
The state treasurer’s office has re­
have found that tha "mystery metal”
ceived from various counties >494,-
of the Grants Pass country is tin, it
557.71 of first-half taxes, which were
was announced recently.
due May 1. There was due the state
More salmon are running in the in first-half taxes >2,613,103.43. Seven
Rogue river than h ive been noted in counties have remitted to the treas­
the last 30 years, according to Claud ury department In full, while two oth­
Barton, licensed state guide.
er counties have made partial pay­
Checks amounting to >312,000 are ments.
being passed out to the Indians on
The commercial fishing season on
the Klamath reservation. The money the lower Columbia river for the sec­
comes from the sale of reservation ond week shows a considerable drop
doesn’t matter,
timber.
from fair catches the first, according a fghttng man.
Sealed bids fo the construction of to canneries near Astoria. Better re­ N.j one knows where or how he died.
ferry slips, bridge and various other sults are expected when tide condi­ It may have been In Bclleau Wood
improvements will be opened by the tions will be favorable. About 12,000 □r it St. Mlhiel, or somewhere on the
state highway commission at a meet­ cases of the 1927 salmon pack have So-gime that he “got his.” A hand
grenade may have dealt him his death
ing to be held in Portland May 24.
been shipped.
The public service commission au­
Eighy fires In Oregon, outside of wound during gome trench raid or it
thorized the Portland Electric Power Portland, during April, resulted In (pty have been a burst of shrapnel,
or a bHyonet thrust when the fighting
company to suspend operations on ap­ losses aggregating >234,410, according wqs hand-to-hand. But that doesn’t
proximately 12 miles of its railroad ex­ to reports filed with Clare A. Lee, mutter, either. .The thing that mat-
tending from Montavilla to Troutdale. state fire marshal. The largest single teas is that “he died fighting” and the
Eighty-fwo arrests for violations of loss for the month was represented in fia-c for which he died was the Stars
the prohibition law were made by the destruction of a general store and snj Stripes.
<*’o one knows his name. It may
agents of the state prohibition depart­ contents In Wasco county, with loss
hg.e
been Smith, or O’Brien or Cohen
estimated
at
>75,000.
ment during April, according to W.
>i Schwartz or Smedjkl. Or it might
S. Levens, state prohibition commis­
Eight automobile fatalities reported lave been Paul Two Lances—the
from Portland during the four weeks hnme by which he was once known in
sioner.
, The Douglas county court has ap­ ending April 23, 1927, were twice as the duy school on some Indian reser-
propriated >12,000 to be used in co­ many as occurred In that city during katlon out West. But his name and the
operation with the bureau of public the corresponding period a year ago. nationality of his parents are not
roads on the Tiller Trail-Crater Lake Portland has been the scene of 42 things thnt matter. He now bears
cut-off road. The government gives fatal motor accidents during the 52 Me proudest name that any man can
weeks ending April 23, as compared sear.
>7600.
It’s “The Unknown Soldier.”
Construction of a new passenger de­ with 49 during 52 weeks ending April
Five years ago they brought his
pot for Marshfield has been authorized 24, 1926.
tpdy back across the Atlantic and
The student body of Linfield col­ SU November 11, 1022, they placed It
by the Southern Pacific company.
The American Railway Express com­ lege at McMinnville by a vote <«f 146 u a white marble tomb In a famous
pany will also build a new office to 87, refused to uphold the honor sometery near the nation’s capital—
council, a student organization, which i soldier home from the wars. Since
structure.
.
{bat time the great men of his own
While pulling bananas from a stalk had voted for suspension of two stu­ spuntry have bowed their heads rev­
dents
charged
with
violation
of
the
at a grocery store In Oregon City, E.
erently before his last resting place.
Hoecker, clerk, Just missed "plucking" honor council’s rules against smoking. To It have come the great of other
The
students
also
by
a
vote
of
173
to
lends. A queen of royal European
a large tarantula, a venomous spider
64 voted for repeal of the rule against Mood, princes, generals, admirals,
of unusual size. The “bug” was very
smoking.
statesmen, have laid their wreaths
much alive.
The Marion county court will ask ipon his tomb.
The Seaside chamber of commerce
But all of this homage is as noth-
has voted to send the Seaside high the highway commission and federal pg compared. to that which is be-
officials to assist financially in the
school girls’ band to Portlund to
ng offered up In the hearts of all
march in the Merrykhana parade dur­ proposed Improvement of the road tmerlcans on May 30, 1927. For the
over the mountains from Salem to
ing the Rose Festival. The band has
.omh of the Unknown Soldier in Ar­
Bend by way of Minto pass. It has lington cemetery Is a national shrine
28 pieces.
been estimated that the cost of this
According to an official survey just road would be >60,000 less than that o which the thoughts of all Americans
completed in the Medford city school of any other proposed road across ipe turning on Memorial dny tills
Mar. It is more than a symbol of
there are at present 207 little folks the mountains.
rfic 4,000 American soldiers killed in
between the ages of 6 and 6 ready to
Approximately 250 000 sets of pas tattle "over there” whose names and
enter school for Ihe first time next
senger automobile license plates will personal histories were unknown. The
September.
be required to meet the demands in honor paid to this one of the 4,000,
Ashland high school, winner of the 1928, according to specifications mail­ he whose identity will forever remain
western division of the Oregon High ed to various manufacturers by Sam a mystery, symbolizes more than a
School Debaters’ league, met the Me A. Kozer, secretary of state. The col­ nation’s grateful remembrance of the
thousands of men who lost their lives
Loughlin union high school team, east­ ors selected for 1928 are a white back­
In the World war. It is the Incarna­
ern Oregon champions, in Eugene May ground with black figures and letters. tion of the spirit of Memorial day, a
19, for the state title.
These colors are directly opposite day observed by a nation In which
At a meeting of depositors held last thoee adopted for the plates now in the word “united” tn Its name hns
* new significance, a nation pausing
week it was reported that the Tilla use.
In grateful remembrance of all the
mook County bank, closed March 19
Whether wild rice, food for water joldlers who gave their lives in all
may, if liquidated, be able to pay 66 fowl, will grow tn the Deschutes coun
per cent on commercial deposits and try will be determined by next fall. the wars In which their country has
ever been engaged. And it is here In
85 per cent on savings.
It was learned in Bend with the an­ Arlington, where the Unknown Sol-
Waldo Golden, 9-year-old son of Mr nouncement from local sportsmen that ller sleeps, that President Coolidge,
and Mrs. Mark E. Golden of Winberry the rice was being planted in widely as the commander-in-chief of all
died at a Eugene hospital as a result scattered parts of the Deschutes basin American soldiers and the first citi­
of burns sustained when a quantity of Some of the wild rice was planted at zen of the land, will voice America’s
powder with which he and other chil Creswell. O’Dell and north and south tribute to her soldier dead on Me­
morial dny this year.
dren were playing exploded.
Twin lakes. The results of the growth
The first memorial to the unknown
The l.akeview district land office of the rice will be checked in the fall dead was erected in Arlington in 1860
In southwestern Oregon, which was
Fruit growers of the Hogue River It was the Impressive monument of
to have been closed June SO under an valley, as well as delegations of fruit rough-hewn granite and polished
executive order signed by President packers and others Interested from marble (pictured above) which bears
Coolidge, will be continued along with other parts of the state. Including the the following inscription, "Beneath
those at Roseburg and The Dalles
Hood river section, Portland and Eu this stone repose the bones of 2,111
unknown soldiers gathered after the
Dunham Wright, noted pioneer of gene and from the Walla Walla, Yaki­ war from the fields of Bull Run and
Baker county, has been Invited to de­ ma and Wenatchee districts of Wash the route to the Rappahannock. Their
liver the address at the dedication of tngton and some from California, at remains could not he identified but
a memorial tablet at Estes Park, Cal.. tended the demonstration of the fruit their names and deaths are recorded
July 4. Mr. Wright Is the only per cleaning contrivance In Medford last In tlie archives of their country; and
son living who was present when the week, which cleans off all the rosdue Its grateful citizens honor them as of
their noble army of martyrs. May
park was opened, in 1860.
spray.
One
of
the
oldest
hanks
in
the
Wal
Gilbert W. Phelps, 65, Judge of the
sixth Judicial district. Umatilla and Iowa county, the First Bank of Joseph
Morrow counties tor 16 years, died In closed Its doors last week owing to
financial difficulties. Slow paper and
a Portland hospital last week.
Eugene will have a period of clean demands for payment of outside ac­
Cilicia was the name of a maritime
lng up from May 28 to 26. Inclusive, counts la ascribed as the reason for province In the southern part of Asia
Minor. It ls.v between the Mediter­
according to A. A. Reid, chairman of suspending business.
The belief that there Is oil beneath ranean sea and Syria, and through it
the health committee of the city coun
the rich farm lands in the vicinity of ran the great highway from Syria to
ell.
The Silverton community fair will McMinnville is prompting plans for the coast This gave Cilicia great
commercial Importance during several
he held this year on September 15, 16 the drilling of four wells throughout centurlea when It was part of the
and 17 at the Eugene Field building, the county, the first of which will Roman empire, aa were the adjacent
according to the decision of the fair probably "spud in” soon at a point districts of Pniuphylla, I.ycaonla and
on the Yamhill river.
Cappadocia. The principal city of
board.
OREGON STATE NEWS
OF GENERAL INTEREST
Sevent. -five dollars for talking with
Dmdon should be quite an Incentiva
for keeping one’s mind on the point of
issue.
Hot A ir a t Polisher
Pinkham’a
lecauM Lyd ia E. Pinkha
Vegetable Compound
Keeps Them W ell
EXITS ARE M ARKED
“I hear you want a new car,” said
the automobile salesman who had
managed to sneak into old man
Black’s office.
“No, I don’t,” snapped the old man,
“but my wife does, and she also wants
a trip to Europe, a million dollars and
forty pounds off her weight, and she
has Just as much chancy of getting
a new car as she hns any of the oth­
ers, The way you came In takes you
out, make your going snappy.”
FIGURE THIS OUT
Fifty years ago there —
occupations for women. Some taught
------------- -—
” s c h o o l , some did
housework, s o m e
found work to do at
home and a tew
took up nursing.
Today there ar»
very few occupations
not open to women.
Today they work la
factories with hun-
d r e d « o f other
women and girls.
T h e r e are also
women architects,
awyers, dentists, executives, and legis­
lators. But all too often a woman
wins her economic Independence at the
cost of her health.
Mrs. Elizabeth Chamberlain who
works In the Unlonall factory making
overalls writes that she got "wonderful
results” from taking Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
Mrs.
Chamberlain lives at 500 Monmouth
St., Trenton, N. J. She recommends
the Vegetable Compound to her friends
in the factory and will gladly answer
any letters she gets from women asking
about It.
"
„
If Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has helped other women*
why shouldn’t It help you?
C m v m I m J ■■■ ■wrrtlr. n b - b I m M I c .
M&WMSI0WS SYRUP
ne Wub’ eat CMU n b ' s Reg«fa
“How do you think a' man picks
a wife in Turkey when he can’t see
her face till after they are married 7“
“Why the same as they pick them
over here.”
Children j w w healthy and free
from colic, diarrhoea, flatulency,
constipation and other trouble If
given it a t teething time.
la f« .P ...................................
m arkable and gratifying reeulta.
A ll Right
Saya Mrs. Jon as to Mrs. Rand:
“T h e situ a tio n 's w ell In hand.*
Basra
"I’ll ta ll the w orld,“ in d u lcet tones.
Too H ot-H eaded
Critic—You have made your hero
too hot-headed. I’m afraid.
Budding Author — How do you
mean?
“Well, he has a lantern Jaw to be­
gin with. And so his whole face lit
up I His cheeks flamed, he guve a
burning glance, and then, blazing with
wrath and boiling with rage, he ad­
ministered a scorching rebuke.”
they .rest in peace.” Underneath is
a great vault of solid masonry, 80
feet deep and 200 feet square, in
which are stacked the humble pine-
wood coffins containing the bones of
the soldiers. Nor are these the only
unknown dead in Arlington. It was
before this monument that the first
formal Memorial Day exercises—al­
though the day had not yet been thus
officially designated—were held on
May 30, 1868, as the result of the
famous General Oriftsrt No. 11, is­
sued by Gen. John A. Logan, com­
mander of the G. A. R., calling for
‘the strewing with flowers or other­
wise decorating the graves of com­
rades who died In defense of their
country.”
War In its very nature is a trag­
edy, but saddest of all things con­
nected with war Is the tragedy of the
unknown dead.
For some soldiers
war means moments of exaltation in
the knowledge of a sacrifice worth
while, of heroism which will send his
name ringing down the years and of
tender care of the poor shell of his
body after the spirit hns fled. But to
others It means privation, pain, the
same exaltation, the same heroism
but with it death, his name forgot­
ten, and only a headstone murked
“Unknown” to show where this bit
of human wreckage was consigned
to Mother Earth.
Considering the vast armies which
the United States put into the field
In the World war, there was a sur­
prisingly small number of unknown
deud. Of approximately 40,000 Amer­
icans killed#in that conflict only 4,-
000 were Hated as "unknown” at the
time the body of one of them was
selected for the nation’s highest hon­
ors to be buried In Arlington as "The
Unknown Soldier.” Since that time
persistent investigation has cut down
the number until now the War de­
partment reports something over 1,-
600 still listed as unidentified.
The reason for the smallness of
the list of unknown dead In this war
lies In the simple little aluminum
identification tags which each man in
the A. E. F. wore. Two of these tags,
each about the size of a silver half
dollar, were worn around the neck,
one suspended from the other. On
each of these was stamped, in the
case of an officer, his name, rank nnd
regiment, corps or department, and
In the case of tlie enlisted man, his
name and serial, number.
Ef the
weurer was killed one tag wns burled
with him and the other wns usually
attached to the cross at the head of
his grave. Whenever practicable a
cemetery was established near every
battlefield and each grave was marked
with a temporary headboard giving
the name, rank and name of the or­
ganization of the man buried there.
The company officer was made respon­
sible for this and he was required to
furnish the War department with a
sketch map of the graves.
In contrast to the small number
of unknown dead In the World war,
the record of the Civil war Is appall­
ing. There are eighty-three national
cemeteries In this country where are
buried 393,714 Union soldiers. Of this
number the graves of 153,414 are
marked "Unknown!” These totals in­
clude those who died In hospitals
where Identities would have been
easily established. In the haste with
which the country plunged Into the
Civil war no system for identification
of the killed was adopted. After a bat­
tle searching parties gathered up the
wounded and burled the dead In hast­
ily dug pits. Since this work was
usually done at night, these detach­
ments overlooked many of the casual­
ties. Then the army marched nway
leaving these bodies to keep their
lonely “bivouac of the dead.”
After the Civil war was over, the
federal government undertook the
task of making a systematic search
for the Union dead on many of the
Civil war battlefields. Hundreds of
skeletons were found but there was
no mark of identification.
It was
such “unknown dead” as these who
sleep beneath the memorial In Ar­
lington. And they are only a few of
the unknown there. In 1872 the War
department marked 18,000 graves in
that cemetery with little marble
headstones and of this number 4,000
bear the simple word "Unknown I"
The Civil war was not the only one
which added to the long roll of miss­
ing men. soldiers who gave their lives
for their country and of whom no
trace now remains. Their last resting
places, unmarked, are scattered far
and wide over the United State»—In
the West, where Indian bullet and
lance took their toll, as well as on
the battlefields of the South. Memorial
Day Is a day for honoring the4r mem­
ory, too, and the tomb of the Unknown
Soldier In Arlington, before which in
spirit, at least, all Americans bow
their heads In reverence on Memorial
Day Is a monument to all American
soldiers who fought for the preserva­
tion of this “government of the peo­
ple, for the people and by the peo­
ple" even though all visible traces
of 'its defenders has “perished from
the earth.”
Cilicia was Tarsus, which was the
birthplace of S t Paul. He was, as he
said, with pardonable pride tn hla
birthplace, a cltlien of no mean city
About 90 years before the missionary
Journeys of S t Paul, Cicero, the
famous Roman orator and politician,
wns appointed governor of Cilicia,
and of the adjacenj Inland of Cyprus
rarily. Tha fact that not all of hla
parishioners have radios did not keep
Rev. Raymond Oonso, of the Congre­
gational church, from delivering his
Sunday sermon to his flock. The
sermon that he had prepared for d»
livery was broadcast through the
mails to members of hla parish.
Jt«»oarc«?a/ Prenehor
An outbraak of acarlet fever at
Durham. Conn- made It advisable to
discontinue church services tempo­
Left-Handed Person
Rot air la used for polishing. The
articles to be treated are placed In
Doctor Hlsaa of rrankfort oo tbe-
a bksket In a centrifugal machine Maln has made a special study of tha
Aa we understand our agrlcultural driven at a very high speed and heat brain tn left-handed persons. These
gsography, a farro la a negl'cted body ed air la blown from a pipe through studies serve to disprove absolutely
Doctor Ivy of Northwestern univer­ of land entlrely surrounded by prò» the basket Nickel plated articles that a number of superstitions rotative to
_______ _
have become tarnished are made left-handedneau. He showed, first of
sity says that foods too hot for the pority.
bright tn a few intnotea. Wet metal •II. that left huadedneaa ts net a mark
thumb are too hot for the human
Allegatlona that slavary etili «lista fresh from the bath needs no prellml Of mental infertority; second, that the
stomach That soup the waiter Just
brought tn most have been about In Louisiana ought to be good adver­ nary drying, for the current of air right hand side of the brain develops
tising for ths "Uncie Tom'a Cablo" dries and polishes It at the same aao- when the peroSB la left handed la the
right
fthowa
way that tha laft-hnnd aide of
W ork and Bolshevism
N ot Closely U nited
Secretary Frank Morrison of the
American Federation of Labor, was
praising labor’s repudiation of Bol­
shevism and Communism.
“Look at what the demagogues o f
Bolshevism and Communism,” h»
said, “are doing In Europe. Look at
what they’re doing in China. I heard
a story from China the other day.
"A conservative old mandarin rose
The Flirt on the Phone
Hello 1 Peggy speaking—who la to address a Bolshevlzed crowd in
Shanghai, His address began and
this?”
ended like this:
“It’s Frank, sweetheart.”
“ ‘My brothers, you are working
“I can’t understand you.”
“Listen—F for Ferdie, R for Rob­ men I’
“ ‘Hurrah I Glory I’
ert, A for Arthur, N for Nat and K
" ‘And being working men—’
for Kenneth.”
“ 'Hurrah I Glory 1*
"But, dearest, which one of the five
“ ‘You must work.’
are you?”
“ ‘Throw him out I Down with him t
Tear out his false, lying tongue I’ "—
C am e B elli A v o id e d
Detroit Free Press.
“Say, pa, that new boy next door
knows I can lick him.”
I f your eyea sm art or feel scalded, R om an
B ye B alsam , applied on going to bed. w ill
“DiJ he say so?”
relieve them by morning. Adv.
“No, but I offered him a bite of my
apple and he only took a little bite.”
Brass Band for Juneau
BASEBALL LANGUAGE
Juneau, Alaska, capital of an em­
pire of more than 590,000 square miles,
has a full brass band for the first tlm®
In ten years. It is financed by fund»
from public dances. The band pro­
vides one of the few opportunities for
amusement.
Almost half the farms in Sweden
use electric power, whereas only 3 per
cent of American farms are electrified.
“They caught him at home.”
“I thought you said he was out.'
“I did.”
“Well, how can he be at home, if
he is out?”
That M eant U p or Down
"Money can ta k e you anyw here,"
R em arked old Dan D eW itt;
“M oney can ta k e you an yh ere.
S ave w h ere you can ’t ta k e It,"
W ise
Ted—I taw my doctor about my
loaa of memory.
Jerry—What did he do?
Ted—Made me pay in advance.
A n d Now You Know
"Ah, you are the young man In
question? What's your aam er
“Ivan AusxelchmmugencugtekL”
”How do you spell It?"
“As it la pronounced I”—Pele Mele,
Paria.
TA « Skirts Looh Like It
Hardware Clerk—I’d like to borrow
a yardstick.
Dry Goods Clerk—We’ve nothing
hut a foot rule. We sell dress goods
now by the inch.
Tanlac Relieves
Many Ills
Health Ravaged fry Bail Heart,
Nervousness and Sour Stomach,
Mrs. McLean Manages to Avert
Disaster. Health and Strength
Are Restored. Gains 38Pounds.
“Take Tanlac -
that is my advice to
everybody, and it is J
from one who has!
tried it,” says Mrs, I
Elizabeth McLean, |
4171 Lincoln Ave,,
Oakland, Cal.
“ F o u r or f iv e
years ago I first used
It, and ever since (
then have depended
on it. Then I was
afflicted generally—had to build up or
give up entirely. My stomach was in aa
awf ul state, my heart bothered me and I
could not eat. I was so weak and nerv­
ous, I kept losing weight and strength,
my health seemed wrecked, nothing
helped me.
.
, _ ,
“But six or eight bottles of Tanlac
put me back in splendid condition. My
stomach troubles gave way; I gained
perfect digestion and with it an appetite
hard to satisfy. I increased in weight
from 120 to 158 pounds. Tanlac i»
my formula for good health. It is and
always will be the best.”
Tanlsc made of roots, barks and
herbs, helps build up scrawny, weak
bodice, drive out causes of suffering and
Seldom on the Job
. Learn
Tania»
"The sun,” says a famous English
scientist, “is the greatest physician In
the world."
The trouble over there, we under­
stand, is that It la hard to get an
appointment
AU OB
Re—True, my salary la not large,
She—Do you mix much with ao- but then, two can live as cheaply as
duty?
_
She—But, Tom, dear, you forget—
He—Well, I should say BO—Pm a
there's mother.
divorce lawyer.
An Im portant M em ber
tha
the normal brain develops
person Is right-handed.
It was also discovered that In
tha ease of a left-handed painter
named Menael. the right hemlspbere of
the brain was found to have more con­
vulsions, to be mere folded and more
tortuous. Thera was aa Increase la
tha amount e f the tissue substance,
and other manifestations to indicate
anatomic sxpreselona of
deucy of tha left hand ta I
rented.—Dr. Morris
Scientific
P A R K E R ’S
H A IR B A L S A M
He Got tho Job
My a b v a m iF e M Heir
“Suppose.” said the bookseller to the
Ä
Ä
il
would-be clerk, "suppose a customer
O
mbs
. O d J-
HINDKRCORNS
•-
asked for a volume we didn't have. ftoesee,
Me. m o m *n sete, e e n m eoMfon id I
What would you d o r
"Why." said the young man. “1
would book the order and than
the book."
Deafaess—Head Noises
K U ZV EB kr
■ Joke
a «
V