Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1927)
T H » ECgBMISTOH TTKRAUD. gERMISTOST. O BSG O X., 1. Helped Through Day by Thing» of Beauty He apologized for leaning across tbe man in tbe comer seat to look ont of the railway carriage window. “I never miss that little glimpse of tbe canal,” he added. “I t helps me through the day.” He sat back satisfied and for a few moments kept his eyes shut He was going over the details of the quay-side and the warehouses and the barges with their brown sails and the men carrying piles of bricks. They “helped him through the day.” It Is a tine thing to have some help of that kind. The more the better. Everywhere there Is beauty, if we only keep our eyes skinned to dis cover it. Some of us find a garden where at all seasons there is something to re joice us. Some get their help from a noble building. Some like to walk every day through a park and enjoy the trees in their changing aspects, different every week in the year. Others draw their daily inspiration and encouragement from art, a pic ture, a reproduction, a piece of sculp ture. Or It may be that literature provides' the needed help— verse treasured in the memory or the haunting beauty of exquisite prose.— Philadelphia Record. Experiment in Cross Breeding Is Success A new animal, designed to combine the milk-giving abundance of the South with the hardiness of the North, has been raised In the farm attached to Alaska college, at Fairbanks, Alaska. This animal has been developed with Galloway cows as the mothers ami yaks from the snowy fastnesses of Tibet as fathers. Their name as well as their breed has been crossed, and the have received the name of gaiio- yaks. The galloyak has Inherited the long shaggy hair of his father, but the placidity of the mother has evidently been responsible for the reduction of tbe paternal Imtnp. The animals are hardy, and are well adapted to the extreme cold of the North. The value of the new animal Is great. Its meat Is of excellent flavor, and is extremely nourishing. Its hair has a high commercial value, and first quality leather can bo made from Its hide. M onopoly Not P ottible The Columbia State offers this: “When the Hebrew minor prophet Joe' wrote the lovely saying that Dry den hammered into an heroic line— T o u r old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions*— lie was probably—we haven’t the He brew text before us—trying to round out what Is known as a Hebrew ‘paral lelism,’ saying one thing In two ways, rather than two things in a kind of formula. He was saying that every body, with due illumination, would dream dreams and see visions, as Job dreamed and saw them in the dead watches of the night. Neither old nor young has a monopoly of dream and vision.” W orld’» L arge* "Port” Montana has had a good year and the people are much pleased w ith the Mrs. F ran k Helms of Echo was in return« from th eir crops,” said M r Schilling. He also stated th a t the town the first of the week. thermometer showed 22 below when he le ft th at part of the country. Mrs. F. B. K n ig h t of Irrig o n was here shopping Monday. F. B. Stuart, F. A. Baker and D. Shumway of Stanfield were here the firs t of the week. J. M. B urnett, signal man for the O. W . R. & N., has rented the house at Ridgeway and Fourth. M r. and Mrs. Leo H u rly have the house on the highway form erly oc cupied by A. H. Norton. The Port of New York is a district, created by compact or treaty, between James M cK ittric k of gpkane is the states of New York and New Jer sey and comprising the territory with here this week on business connect in a tine drawn from Port Chester, ed w ith Federal bank loans In this across through White Plains, over to district. Yonkers, across the Hudson river to Piermont down on the New Jersey M r. and M ra George Slagle of side, passing beside Passaic and Pat P ilo t Rock were guests Wednesday erson and taking in the industrial night Of M r. and Mrs. B. S. Kingp- territory west of and including Ho ley. Mra. Slagle and Mrs. Kingsley boken, Jersey City, Newark, all the w ent to school together ag girls and way to South Amboy, across again to the New York side, taking In tbe com have been lifelong friends. plete area of the city of New York. The population of the port district is Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fishbeck of approximately 9,000,000. Montana, who have been visiting Mrs C. C. Durfey, left Monday morning for Los Angeles. They are driving Famous Painting The painting of “The Last Supper" and w ill stop a t San Francisco and by Leonardo da Vinci Is recognized Sacramento for brief visits. as one of the world's masterpieces. It was originally painted by order of the duke of Milan on the walls of tbe Dominican convent of the Madonna del Grazie. The picture is now in a state of decay, but several very fine copies have been made. One of them, at the Royal academy In London, 1» considered worthily representative of the original. The "Mona Lisa" of the same painter, now in the Louvre, is also rated among the greatest paint ings. Making Safe» Safer A new safe that has an almost bu man power of giving warning should any attempt be made to rob it has been Invented. Should burglars at tempt to break It open by the usual methods of using heat, the material of which the safe is built gives off a series of loud reports. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY The new material Is In the form of plates, one inch thick, applied Inside LOST— Collie dog. answers to name the safe. Up to the present no meth of Pat.Rrward. Dave Mlttieedort.' od has been found for melting, X f - l t t * lng or destroying the material. Mrs. W . T. Lam bert, a former res ident of the project, was the guest of friends here Saturday. Mrs. Lam bert w ill leave for New Y o rk short ly after the holidays, m aking a num ber of visit« w ith friends and rela tives en route. A t New York she w ill take passage for Buenos Aires where she w ill pay an extended visit to her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Shot well. h . K. scHiLLnrc rzttubrs - FROM POST IR M0RTARA H . M. Schilling, former project man ager here, who has been stationed at Ballantine, Montana, for over a year, returned the firs t of the week to Hermiston, where his fam ily has been settled since early fall. M r. Schill ing has resigned from the govern ment service, but has made no plans fo r tbe Immediate future. Caruso’s Loyalty to Hi» Queen Pcthe'ic Cnrnso bad one old friend to whom he was devoted and whom lie wor shiped from afnr with a pathetic sort of adoration. This was Marla Sophia of Bourbon, the former queen of Na ples. She had been his benefactress in the early days of his career. Even though her reign was over and she lived In exile In France, she was still his queen, the sovereign of his na tive city. He never failed to visit her when he went abroad, and on Ills last visit site presented him with a scarf- pin, a medal carved with the head of a Madonna encircled with rubles. Through her secretary, Signor Bar celona, Caruso received regular re ports of her, and each month he wrote his queen a beautiful and ceremonious letter, addressing her with all the for mality due her former rank, to which she clung pathetically even in her old age. The exile of this venerable queen was one of the things he would brood over with tears In his eyes, but he would never discuss her with any one. To him she was the sacred em blem of royalty.—Dorothy Caruso, In the Saturday Evening Post. Chair Too Valuable to Consign to Attic T h * guest sat down In a comfortable- looking rocking chair, but Immediate ly his feet flew up In the air. "Tuke another chair, take thia one." urged his hostess. “That chair Is very un comfortable." “Why in the world do you keep that chair In this room y growled Friend Husband. “No one can sit In It with ease. Why don’t you put It in the at- tlc r “Because no one can sit In It with ease," replied Friend Wife. "You’ve given the reason yourself. I t ’s for those guests, callers, whom I don't wish to be at ease. I engineer It so they'll sit there and their calls are much shortened thereby. I f anyone I like happens to get into that chair. It Is an easy matter for me to Insist that he or she change for a comfort able chair. Oh. my, yes, that uncom fortable chair has saved me many hours of boring talk."— Springfield Union. Freedom Bring» Light Montana Rancher Named Wheat King. There Is only one cure for evils Chicago.— E. E. Edson-Smlth, a 65- which newly acquired freedom pro year-old Corvallis, Mont., farmer, is duces, and that cure is freedom. The the new wheat king of North America. bluze of truth and liberty may at first Competing against the best wheat pro dazzle and bewilder nations which ducers of the United States and Can have become half-blind In the house of bondage. But let them gaze on, ada at the International Livestock ex and they will soon be able to bear IL position, Smith wrested the prize title In a few years men learn to reason, from the Canadian Herman Trelle of and the extreme violence of opinions the Peace River district of Alberta, subsides. The scattered elements of Canada. It was only the third time truth cease to contend and begin to I In 17 years of competition that Uncle coalesce. And at length a system of Sam’s rural sons have been able to Justice and cyder Is educed out of the win the huge cup, emblematic of the chaos.—Macnuluy. championship. Originated in Error Another Burbank An explanation of the origin of the word “hoodlum” has been given in the following tale: Out in 8nn Francisco a great many years ago there was a man named Muldeon, who was the leader of a band ef boy rufllans. A reporter who had been assigned to a story of this gang attempted to coin a name for them and transposed the name Muldoon, calling the gang noodlums. The typesetter mistook the letter “n” for “h" and made the word "hoodlum.” It passed the proof reader and became a recognized word. A little four-year-old girl had been playing with a boy of the same age when she spied a dead bird lying In a neighbor's backyard and persuaded the boy to get IL They immediately be gan examining It, but wished to know something about It, so a member ef the little girl's family was called and several questions were answered. Finally the little girl, with a puzzled look on her fnce, turned and asked: “Jf you planted it, would It grow Into a bird'" oss> Ancient W edding Gown» Most of the I’iantagenet and Tudor queens were married In that vivid hue which Is still popular In parts ol Brittany, where the hrlde is usually dressed In crimson brocade. It was Mary Stuart who first changed the color of the bridal garments. At her marriage with Francis I I of France In 1558, which took place not before the altar but. before tlie great doors of Notre Dame, she was gowned In white brocade, with a train of pale blue Persian velvet six yards In length. Seemed Too Much for One A little girl was traveling In a street car with her mother, a woman of very slight build. Presently an extremely stout woman boarded tbe car, and sat down oppo site the little girl. The car started off with a Jerk, and the little child contemplated the wom an opposite her for some minutes, then, turning to her mother. Inquired In a loud voice: "Mother, is that all one lady?” K eep Bright Keep yonr mind bright and you won't get blue.—Forbes Magazine, t J E MARKETS Portland Wheat— B. M. bluestem, $1.36; hard white, 11.2854; federation, <1.26; soft white, western white, <1.2554; hard winter, <1.23; northern spring, <1.24; western red, <1.21. Hay — Alfalfa, <16.60917; valley timothy, <16.60®17; eastern Oregon timothy, <20. Butterfat— 4#c. Eggs— Ranch, 34c. Cattle— Steers, good, <10®10.76. Hogs— Medium to choice, <8.2600.60. Lambs — Medium to choice, <11® 12.60. Seattle. Wheat— Soft white, western white, <12854: hard winter, <1.26; western red, <1.23; northern spring, <1.26; bluestem, <1.3 6 54; dark northern •prlng, <1.46; dark hard winter, <1.39. Hay — Alfalfa, <26; timothy, <28; P. S„ <22. Buttertet—64c. Eggs— Ranch, 26 0 36c. Cattis— Steers, cnolce, <100 10 76. Hogs—Prime. « .6 O 0 I.M . •pekane. Cattle- Steers, good, « 60910. Hogs-Good, <9.3601.36.