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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1927)
The Herald Keeps Close to the Heart and Mind of the Umatilla Project. elite Jbrmwfcm Wralfc vol . xxn THREATEN HALF Passing NO. 10 HERMISTON, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1927 HERMISTON BEATS UMATILLA 45 TO 0 VISITORS i* * ’ MRS. W. G. McADOO EXPERIMENT STATION TO HAVE IN FIRST SIX LOTS IN TEST THEN WEAKEN Attack Keeps LAMB FEEDING TO BE DONE THIS YEAR Valae Of Hay In Different Forms Walenta’s Crew Guessing Until Second To Be Studied Again In Half Of Contest Sixth Year Of Work The Hermiston Gridiron Warriors cleaned up on the Umatilla Railroad ers on the local field last Friday by the overwhelming score of 45 to 0. The game started out like a real battle with the visitors putting up a strong defense and opening up a flashing aerial attack that looked dangerous at times. They held the locals to 6 to 0 In the first half and tad possession of the ball most of the time. In the second half the record was different. From the first kickoff Her miston carried the ball straight down the field for a counter. They kept the oval most of the time and scored repeatedly on end runs, off tackle smashes and as a result of intercept ing Umatilla passes. George Fetzer uncorked some new ones on the locals, but one stunt on kickoff was ruled out. The Hermis ton line proved mighty tough for the visitors, and the field running abili ty of Newell and Kennings, aided by the interferance given by their back- field mates proved plenty good. Mahoney, Thompson and Walsh made up the visitors’ passing combi nation, and Bray was the strong man of their defense. Coach Walenta played all of his men in the fray to give some of the younger, players a little experience. The local lineup wag as follows: Grfggs, center; Earnheart, Upham guards; Ott, Robinson, tackles; Smith, G. Parson8 ends; D. Parsons, McKenzie, halves; Newell, full; and Kennings, quarter. Substitutions: Addleman tor Ott; Feltlfhuse itfr D. Parsons; D. Parsons for Addleman; Briggs for Felthouse; Nation for Briggs. Warner, referee. EED POTATOES ARE LOW IN PRICE THIS SEASON Prices being paid for seed pota ss this year are not sufficiently gh to cause much enthusiasm am- g growers ott Weston mountain, cording to W. L. Rayborn, one of e leading growers of that district, io wa8 here Monday in connection th the delivery of a carload of Ir- l Cobblers to the Farm Bureau Co- erative for locol growers. ‘'Common mountain seed for im- sdiate delivery has been selling for 2.50 per ton,” he said. “Standard Bd is bringing »27.50. Very little rtlfied seed stock has-been sold to te, but the ealeB made have been the rate ot »32.50- per ton.” Yields this year on Weston moun- ln were about normal, Mr. Ray- m stated. He had both Netted sms and Irish Cobblers. He plans double hiB acreage of Cobblers ixt year. Dr. Thistlewaite Coming ?este of dairy herds on the pro- t for tuberculosis will start Mou- mornlng. Dr. Thistlewaite will here to make the tests. Those ry herd owners desiring to have work done should notify P. P. livan so the Itinerary can be ar- Aarhus of Umatilla was a Her visitor Tuesday New portrait of Mrs. W. G. McAdoo, wife of the former secretary of the treasury, and daughter of the late President Wilson. GRANT PERMIT FOR. BIG LONGVIEW SPAN Lamb feeding for experimental purposes is being conducted this year at the Hermiston Experiment station for the sixth consecutive year, ac cording to H. K. Dean, superintend ent. The lambs are still on pasture and w ill not go into the feed lots at the farm until December 1. The purpose of this year’s work will be to secure further information a« to the relative value of long hay, choppd hay and ground alfalfa meal for lamb feeding, Supt. Dean stated. Data already secured In previous years show that chopped hay 1» more profitable and that the meal is still more economical than long hay. with allowance made for the greater cost. The lambs w ill have a ration of all the hay they will clean up and a pound of whole barley per head per day. There will be six lots of 45 head each. "During the five years our feeding operations have been conducted we lost money one year, broke even an other and made money the three re maining years,” Mr. Dean stated. "Lamb feeding Is not proving of in terest to many local farmers, but In Union, Wallowa, Malheur and other eastern Oregon counties, I have found that sheep men and feeders have been following the results of the testg closely and with Interest.” INTEREST CONTINUES IN FORMING COW TESTING BODY Cow testing work that will re quire between one and two weeks of the official tester's time is In pros pect in the Hermiston district, ac cording to a check made by G. H. Jenkins, assistant county agent, who Is In charge of securing the signup of dairy herd owners locally for the proposed cow testing association. Local dairy men are keenly Inter ested In the proposed associatoin, and the chief cause of delay In push ing the sfgnup through to an immed iate conclusion is the fact that so many herds' are so small that two or three owners must combine In order to provide one day's testing each month, Mr. Jenkins stated. Neigh bors are co-operating In these ar rangem ent which are being worked out slowly. WATER DISTRICT ELECTION IS WARM MADDEN AND STROHM EMERGE AS VICTORS Many Ballots Cast And Only Six Votes Determine Winner In Washington, D. C.—Application of Nation-Strohm Case the Longview Wash., Bridge company for a permit to start construction of a Tuesday was election day for irri bridge over the Columbia river on re gation districts, and In the Hermis vised specifications was granted by ton district one of the hottest con the cabinet committee which consid tests ever recorded in the history of ered the question. the district marked the balloting. The revised application, chawed to New Madden for the long term conform with the minimum clearance and George Strohm for the short requirements fixed by Secretaries term were elected, but their oppo Davis, Jardine and Hoover had been nents, Jasper Templeton and Bert placed on file with Secretary Davis of Nation, both polled heavy votes. the war department. The vote cast was ag follows: Tem The application Is the necessary rou pleton, 56, Madden, 107; Strohm, tine step to carry out the requirements 85, Nation, 79. laid down by the secretaries at- their In the Westland district, Lee Save recent meeting, increasing the verti ly, candidate to succeed himself as cal clearance of the bridge from 175 director, was unopposed, and all 16 to 185 feet and the .horizontal clear votes cast were for him. ance between the central piers from The Hermiston board w ill now 1000 feet to 1120. " “It Happened in June” Given By consist of Walter Botkin who has The application for a permit was Student Body Adds Money served for several years, Mr. Madden submitted by W. D. Comer of Seattle and Mr. Strohm. H. J. Stillings, re and Wesley Vandercook of Longview. Athletic Fond, tiring member of the board, was not a candidate for re-election. GOMEZ’ CAREER ENDED Members of the cast of "It Hap the BANQUET AND PROGRAM TO BE Mexican Rebel Leader fa Captured and pened In June," presented in high school auditorium last Satur Promptly Executed. day night, established a high stand GIVEN BY LOCAL LEGION POST Mexico City. — General Arnolfo Gomez has joined In death his com ard of excellence for dramatic of panion in the recent revolutionary ferings for other high school and ON NIGHT OP ARMISTICE DAY movement, General Francesco Ser class groups to follow. The train Efforts to make November 11, 19- rano. The presidential office announc ing was done by Miss Alice Mc ed that Gomez was caRtured and exe Collum, and the effectiveness of the 27, ninth anniversary of the armistice cuted near Teocelo, state of Vera Crux. acting was enhanced by new stage between Germany and the allied pow Thus the attempt of Gomez, Ser scenery, the work of Miss Rose ers, a day long to be remembered in this part of the country are being rano and numerous other rebel gen Donovan. The comedy offers all sorts of made by Hermiston post of the Am erals against President Calles and his government has come to an end. Ser- funny situations, and the members of erican Legion. The committee In rano was captured and executed two the cast lost no opportunity to real- charge of arrangements thinks the days after the movement began, i maximum effectiveness of day will linger a long while In the Gomez succeeded for more than a 1 thc P^V s offerings. Jack Smith as memories of those participating. At Its last meeting the post autho month in hiding in the mountains of the elderly Jim Prlchett, Ruth Ben- Vera Cruz with a handful of follow- isel as Mollie Jessop, the perfect Irish rized a big banquet for veterans of cook, Jane Warner, the spinster lady the World war and their ladles to ers. seeking romance in diligent fashion, be held on the night of Armistice Maxine Avery and Albert Kennings, day. A special committee consisting Germany Names American Envoy. the Insurance salesman, divided the of J. M. Biggs, Ursel Hiatt and Logan Berlin.—Dr. Frederlch Wilhelm von Todd wag appointed to take charge Prittwitz-C.affron, councillor of the comedy laughs between them. Shirley Brownson as Betty Branson of arrangements. German embassy at Rome, has been The banquet will be held at Hotel confirmed as successor to Baron Ago was a very satlfactory leading lady. von Maltzan, late German ambassador Vernon Harrah gave a convincing Hermiston at 8 o’clock with the post portrayal of the villlan role as Jar paying the bill. Reservations must to the United States. vis Sneed. George McKenzie, the be made in advance, and indications wild young man sent to Shady Grove are that at least 80 from Umatilla, Jardine Opposes Reflooding Lake. Washington, D. C. — Secretary of to be tamed, found the treatment Echo and Hermiston will be present. Agriculture Jardine announced he had very acceptable and Interpreted his A program of talks and musical num definitely decided refioodlng of Lower role In creditable fazhion. Marlon bers is being arranged, after which Klamath lake in Oregon and Cali Henderson succeeded In diverting a social hour will be enjoyed. Randy Stewart’s mind from Insur fornia was impracticable. Miss Ada Soneson spent a day in ance to strawberry socials and other Portland things in her role as Susie Crun- Pendleton last week on a shopping W. W. Felthouse Is tr ln del, a friend of Betty. this week on business. HIGH SCHOOL PLAY PLEASES AUDIENCE, EGG MARKETING TO 8E MEETING TOPIC H. B. TEEGARDEN POULTRY MEN TO GATHER AT THE DALLES TUESDAY Discussion On Establishing New Packing Plant In Eastern Oregon Expected « ra m H. B. Teegarden of Greenville. Ohio, who has been named special assistant to Attorney-General John G. Sargent. SINCLAIR CHARGED WITHCONSPIRACY Washington, D. C.—A formal com plaint charging Harry F. Sinclair and one of his agents, Henry Mason Day, with conspiracy to tamper with the jury which was hearing the criminal oil conspiracy charge against the wealthy oil operator and Albert B. Fall was Issued by United States Com missioner Needham C, Turnage. The government maintains that Sin clair, Day and A. Sheldon Clark, a Sin clair Oil company official, are the principals In an alleged plot which cen tered around detective shadowing oi Jurors In the recently collapsed Fall Sinclair oil conspiracy trial. Another startling chapter in the dramatic story of the naval oil leases was closed with the declaration of a mistrial in the hearing of criminal conspiracy charges o i two of the fore most actors In the long drama—Albert B. Fall and Harry F. Sinclair. A grand Jury will write new his tory in its Investigation of charges of Jury tampering before the ex-inter lor secretary and the multi-million aire oq operator and sportsman come to the bar of Justice again for a new trial, probably In January. A meeting that 1» expected to have a vital bearing on the future of egg marketing districts east of the moun tains in thl8 state will be held at The Dalles next Tuesday, November 15. The meeting has been called by L. R. Brelghtaupt, state and federal specialist on farm economics, at the request of poultry growing districts. Hermiston will be represented at the meeting by a delegation that Will Include both grower» and local business men, according to G. H. Jen kins, assistant county agent, who re ceived notification of the meeting. County Agent Holt will also attend rrom Pendleton and probably will have a delegation present from the wheat belt. The meeting Is expected to resolve itself Into a discussion about locating an egg packing • plant east of the mountains. At present organized poultry producer» ship their eggs by the case to Portland where grading i» done. If a plant can be supported east of the mountain», growers will save quite a little on local freight charge». . Hermiston has tried In past years to secure such a plant here, but vol ume has never been sufficient, ac cording to the Pacific Poultry Pro ducers association, so local growers havo resigned themselves to w ait un til the number of hens here increas ed sufficiently to Insure the plant. BRIEF GENERAL NEWS Four members of the Indianapolis city council were Indicted on charges of bribery. Earthquake shocks which may have centeaed In the Pacific Ocean off the Santa Barbar county coast line In Cal ifornia, were felt from Los Angeles north to San Luis Obispo and east as far as Bakersfield. A renewed boycott of the British by the Chinese is in full swing in Can ton, presumably as an endeavor to rally popular support to the newly or ganized Cantonese regime under lead ers of the original nationalist move ment. Evidently the victim of high alti tude suffocation. Captain Hawthorne C. Gray, army balloonist, was found dead In his balloon. In a treatop at Stiles, Tenn. Ho loft Belleville, 111. In an attempt to break the world’s altitude record for balloons. The Stork Mr. and Mrs. U. C. Lenhart are the parents of a seven and a half pound boy, born November 7 at the Hermiston hospital. POPULAR IRRIGON WOMAN -4 DIES IN YAKIMA HOSPITAL ________ ' Complication Of Diseases Causes Death Of Mrs. C. E. Glasgow After Brief Illness Mrs. C. E. Glasgow of Irrigon died on Thursday evening, October 27 aft er about ten days Illness with what was first supposed to be bronchial pneumonia and heart trouble, but the Immediate cause of death was cere bral paralysis. Mrs. Glasgow was Agnes N. Nolan, daughter of Bernard and Idella No lan. She was born In Sioux City, Io wa. July 26, 1883, and was past 44 years old at the time of her death. Her childhood was spent In Sioux City, and at the age of 11 she moved with her parents to Galena, Illinois, where she grew to womanhood. She wa« united In marriage to Charles E. Glasgow to which union one daugh ter was born. Surviving relatives include her husband of Irrigon, daughter, Mrs. Genevieve Hayden of Seattle; her mother, Mr». Idella Studer, Shanes vlile, Ohio; and the following full and half brothers and sisters: Mrs. Laura Broadrelcht, Galena, Illinois: Irene Fair, Dundee. Ohio; Leroy P. Nolan, New York City; Freddie Stu der, Mina, South Dakota; Ethel Stu der, Shanesvlile; and Mrs. Detta Wengard, Dover, Ohio. After residing six years in Gull- ford township, near Galena, Mr. and Mrs. Glasgow moved to Freeport for one year, thence to Scotland, South Dakota, where they farmed for 11 years. In 1916 Mrs Glasgow submitt ed to a very serious operation. She never fully regained her health. Continued on page tw o)