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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1928)
THE HEBMISTOH HERALD, HERMISTOUf. OREQOM. Europe's A rt Object» T elit of W itnetting Excellent W ork Done Lar~e St ms of Money R eally Second Rate? Volcano in Eruption by the N avy Station» Forwarded by W ire The treasury of Europe, that vast Joseph H. Sinclair, representing There Is a constant Increase In the number of compass atatlona main tained by the Nary department along the various coasts. The latest statis tics' available show that 15,374 ship captains were shown their location during heavy fogs last year, and It Is fair to assume that at least 10 per cent of them might have been ground ed or wrecked had It not been for the assistance given by radio. A compass station Is a wireless plant where special apparatus Is used for telling the definite location of a vessel. A ship Is lost In the fog; the wireless operator flashes out the signal, “Q. T. E." The station receiving the mes sage adjusts the radio compass to meet the direction from which the message comes. This Is the "mechan ical ear" of the station and the oper ator can tell exactly the direction down to a point of the compass. Each station getting the message reports to a central station, where calculations are made as to the location of the ship. The distance from shore Is told by the strength of the signals. Then within flve minutes of the time the vessel sends out the Inquiry the reply comes back and the ship's master knows Just where he la and pilots his craft accordingly. Too Much Pessimism Take» Joy From Lit» the American Geographic society, has returned to this country from a hard trip of exploration through Ecuador, where he had a terrific experience In an endeavor to reach a smoking vol cano which had erupted, the whole country for miles around being del uged with a flow of lava. The na lives hnd a wholesome superstitious fear of the great pile and could uot be Induced to guide the explorer as near as he wanted to go, hut by Ills own efforts und alone he managed to get within seien miles of the cone and tills was near enough for him to witness a uumher of explosions which repeatedly changed the contour of the crater’s rim. Little or nothing had been known about the volcano and he secured valui.lde data concerning Its character und location. Mr. Sinclair pointed out that he was not the flret white man to see the vol cano—a mountain which the nutlves call Ueventador, meaning “ Eruptor.’’ Near the place the explorers came on a lone white limn who could not tell them how long he had been there nor why he had penetrated so fur from civilized association. Nor would he go with them to the mountain, lie, too, had been Infected by the supersti tion of the natives, which holds that whenever a human sets foot on the side of the toll volcano Ueventador becomes “muy brava," or very brave. People that are always looking for all the hardships and difficulties that Immunity to Poisons they may meet travel a hard road If Not Yet Understood their speech Is In line with their think ing. I know farmers that start In with One of the most fascinating chap spring work and see their crops ruined 1 tecs in animal poisons Is the subject by coming disaster, until It has been of natural Immunity, the fact that stored uway. A snow and cold spell some animals are Immune to the poi coming after the oats are In is certain eons of others and remain unhurt II to kill the seed, and all must be done stung or bitten by the poisonous ani over. A two days' rain Is evidence mals, whereas all other sorts of beasts that It Is going to be so wet that noth succumb. ing will mature. I f the surface of the A case In point Is that of desert ani ground Is dry we are In the start of mals, which are unharmed by a scor a dry spell that will ruin everything. pion's eting. The desert fox, the kan Thus It goes dally to the flnlsh. I garoo rat and other Inhabitants ol claim that a man that really thinks deserts where scorpions abound are In that way lives a mighty poor life. We tills happy position. Their cousins, have to take about everything on faith living fur awuy from the desert, would In this old world and on the whole at once be seriously Injured by a scor our faith Is Justified. A happy philoso pion's sting, whereas the desert breeds phy of life Is a thing that cun be cul remain unhurt. It Is to be supposed tivated and Is worth while. It Is an that In the far distant pust, before added treasure to the Joy of living, the desert nnlmals hud this complete not for one but for many.—George immunity to scorpion venom, those Godfrey in Successful Farming. which were stung and could not resist died, leaving no offspring. Tlielt luckier brothers, who happened to have D e a r G irls a hardier constitution, survived and Amelia Gingham, the noted actress, left behind them a resistant race of was bright and gay to the end. She descendants.—The Forum. said one evening at a dinner In her , Riverside drive flat: "The girl of today Is dear—dear In C reated C in d erella the monetary sense. It was Just three centuries s'n-e "A millionaire’s son was drinking Charles Perrault, creator of t in tea In a girl sculptor's studio In derella and Red Riding llood, was Greenwich Village. He said, as he born. Perrault, a Frenchman, never poured a little more Bacardi Into his dreamed that the fairy children of cup: his brain would become Immortal. He “ 'I got my month's allowance this wrote poetry of an exceedingly dull morning.’ order, and It wus by Ills poems und '“ Did you? What are you going to not by his fairy stories that he hoped do with It 7* asked the girl sculptor. to win fnme. Perrault conceived and ** 'Well,* said the young man, T wrote tils stories, which he called haven't made up my mind whether to “Tales of Mother Goose," to please buy another racing car or to ask you his little son, Just as Lewis Carroll, a out for the evening.'” mathematician, told the tale of Alice In Wonderland to amuse two little girls. Cinderella and her glass slip Interesting Old Organ Count Georg Friedrich Sol me Leu- per was one of Perrault’s favorite bach, flying mate end financial backer heroines. Soma people have tried to of Otto Koennecke, devotes many an Insist that Cinderella's slipper of evening hour to playing the organ. “verre," or glass, was meant to be a Count Bolme boasts of having one of slipper of "vnlr," or fur, but one can the oldest and most Interesting or not Imagine Cinderella In anything but gans In Germany. It Is so rare a a crystal slipper. specimen of the art of organ building In the Seventeenth century that the W h a t I t a Ped d ler? management of the Frankfurt exposi The word peddler Is derived from tion on “Music In the Life of the Na tions*' requested Its loan for the dura an old English word, “ped,” as lu tion of the fnlr. Count Sol ms readily Spencer's "Shepheard’s Calendar.’' “A assented. The ancient organ lias only bosk Is a wicker ped wherein they use to carry fish." It has no connection five stops and one manual. with the Lntin pedis, a foot, as often reported. A peddler Is, therefore, one D iligence with a ped, basket, or pack, and It has Our word, diligence. Is from the been held in law, one who has the Latin, “dlllgencla." It menns the qual Identical article he sells In Ills “ped.” ity of being diligent; Interested and i It Is, simply speaking, Incorrect, there persevering application; devoted and fore, to call an Itinerant merchant, painstaking effort to acompllsh what who simply takes orders for goods Is undertaken; assiduous Industry; bought from seeing samples he car , careful attention. Industry has the i ie3, a peddler. wider sense of the two words. Imply Ing an hnbltual devotion to labor for A irplar.es Cut Journey some valuable end, as knowledge oi property. Diligence denotes earnest | An airplane* service for gold dig application to some specific object or gers and others concerned with the pursuit which more or less directly newly discovered fields In New Gui has a strong bold on one's Interest or nea Is the Intest aerial development. The new fields are on a 2,000-foot high feelings. plateau, 60 miles from the const, a cross-country Journey of six days, Hairy Elephants und a fleet of airplanes has reduced Historians tell us that. In prehis the trail to one of 50 minutes. All toric times, mighty mastodons and supplies for the fields are now car mammoths were covered from head to ried hy air, the machines returning ta ll with a very coarse hair which, to the con I with cargoes of gold and In many cases, grew long. So the ele passengers. phant's forefathers had long hair hut, as the world changed with regard to W a te rp ro o f G lue weather conditions, from the bitter Casein glues arc exceedingly resist frosty glaciers that were encountered to the modern climate of extreme beut ant to the action of water and retain and cold, the elephant gradually doffed a very high percentage of their orig bis overcoat The hair sometimes inal strength, even after long Immer seen on the top of his head alone re sion under water. They are compara tively Inexpensive, and the materials mains as a reminder. from which they are made are readily available In the market. They are ap Moderation plied cold and w ill set without the * There Is a wide difference between application of heat. the confidence which becomes a man and Ibe weakness which disgraces a The Biggest C ra te r fool. He who never trusts, to a nig Two young Swedish students of ge gard of his soul,' who starves himself, and by whom no other Is enriched; but ology named Wsdell and Ygherg, after he who gives lo every one his confi an expedition In Iceland, have dis dence, and every one his praise, squan covered what to believed to be the ders the fruit which should serve for largest crater In the world, measur the encouragement of Integrity and ing Ibe miles long and a quarter mile the reward of excellence.— Sophie wide, and further claim Io have dla- I ’arkereon. Io "Genie f«»r the Toilet.” , coiered warm springs. litter of the work of their grandfa thers, which the posters preach, la aa miscellaneous and unequal as a Jack daw's swag In the hollow tree, and no one knows the good from the bud, de clares William Bolltho In Vanity Fair. "All artistic criticism," declares this Iconoclast, "is as dead In Europe as was scientific In the Middle ages. The same Frenchman who insists that you do the dusty Journey to wind-swept Versailles to worship the monstrous puiace, where even the impenetrable stolidity of un architect who could make over three hundred yards of bays In exact repetition cannot dis guise the ill-judged megalomania of the monarch who insisted that his fa ther's hunting box should be built Into the center of the largest palace in the world, will rush you with a sickly smile past the magnificent und serene Eiffel tower. “The grand staircase of the Chateau of Blois Is stuck on and superfluous; the greatest German cathedral, Cologne, is nakedly, appulllngly out of scale, too short for its height, and in stead of that lovely Gothic sensation of soaring to the heavens, gives the spectator a dull pain between the eyes; detailed mention of all instances that clutter my memory would not ex haust the case.” Whether good or bad, he concludes, anything built be fore 1840 Is reverenced as being ar tistic. Pastor Called On to H ave Business Mind? “The church Is caught in the occi dental, and more particularly Am erl-. cun, habit of gauging success by the spectacular. A successful church, like a successful furniture shop. Is the one which has the biggest establishment,' offers the biggest assortment of warts, und affords the biggest Income. . . . A considerable part of my work as a minister Is not so different from that of the executive charged with the re sponsibility of getting new customers Into a furniture shop,” writes a min ister In Harper’s. "I must ‘sell’ my Institution just as surely and skillfully ns the man hired by the local chamber of commerce ‘sells’ his or ganization. The difference Is that he was hired for that express purpose, and I, tradition says, was hired, or should have been, for something else." Money orders to the number of 3,- 768.548 and calling for the payment of more than $250,000,000 were tandled last year by the Western Union Teh graph company In its money transfer service, according to Dots and Dashes, a monthly publica tion of the company. The largest single sum I andled wus $250,000. while the smallest was 1 cent. The $250.- 000 order vas In connection with a motion picture contract. The 1-cent transaction grew out of a difference arising when a person in New York sent an acquaintance In Chicago a postcard bearing a 1-cent stump. The laiter. In a sarcastic mood, complained that the commu nication had been received with post age due. Upon leceipt of this letter, the man In New York went to the tele graph' office, sent the cent with a caustic message and went off less $1, the cost of transmission. Instances of 2-cent nmney orders are said to be quite frequent. Involving In practical ly every case valuable mall held for postage due. The three greatest sources of money order business are listed by the com pany publication as workmen em ployed on j(,bs nway from their home town, out-of-town visitors and tour ists caught short of funds on their travels, and traveling salesmen. Many firms encourage their representatives to ask for expense money by wire. They regard that as more economical than to have salesmen waiting for money while hotel bills accrue. R em odeled Barn Made into Camp for Girls How an old gray barn In the coun try near New York city was remodeled into a girls camp by the New York Association for Improving the Condi tion of the I ’oor is told by \V. II. Mat thews In llvgcla Magazine. It was an enormous bnrn, with nu merous stalls, three floors, a silo, har ness rooms and a magnificent view of the Catskill mountains. Extensive re modeling was necessary, but It proved less expencive than the original plan to build a group of cottages, and the result was a unique camp. Fifty-five girls were accommodated for five weeks at a time. The time was a radical departure from the usual plan of keeping children for Iwo weeks. Congenial counselors, oppor tunity for wholesome outdoor play and substantial gains In health made the U te o f Hooks Every home owner should Invest In visit at “Greybarns" a strong Influ a good assortment of hooks. To hook ence for good in the lives of girls who back doors while open Is a conven had never liad such an opportunity ience, ns nothing has to be hunted up before. to hold the door from banging shut when It Is wanted open. Hook doots on the Inside. Hook covers on feed. boxes Instead of having weights on them. Hook basement storm windows that have to be opened occasionally. Hook gates, tool boxes and children’s playhouse doors. These doors should never be hooked tightly or the chil dren will sometime lock themselves In. I f a long staple Is used and a good dealt of It left on top the wood, the hook will hold the door and yet give It play so they can work It open from the Inside.—Successful Farming Maga zine. J a il B ird It was one of those little parties at which au out-of-town girl wus a gues' of honor. In the course of the eve ning she was introduced to a young man from the prep school. After the introduction, she avoided him with the most deliberate Intent When her hostess asked for an explanation, the young visitor replied that he was from the prep school. The hostess looked perplexed. “But Isn’t It a sort of a peniten tlury?" the girl ventured. English Tongue in France English in eleven lessons so equipped twenty Paris policemen that they an swered 350 questions io the new lan guage. This encouraging result caused the prefect, Jean Chiuppe, to order 250 more of the force to go to the school. Frenchmen who hive adven tured abroad suggest thai a notebook and pencil will help out the <'fibers, for they have found It simpler In Eng land and America to write their qeus- tions rather than wrestle with the foreign accent. Snow Storm Form ation Potentially enow storms form In general region of warmth, strange as It may seem. The urea of low baro metric pressure, or storm sea, comes whirling eastward across the tJulf states and then generally takes a twist northward along the Atlantic seaboard. When sufficiently far north these warm air currents are chilled ami the moisture becomes snow, very often being home to the earth hy the back draft of east wind. i - Read T he H erald W ant *Ads N C E I N xD-L P E N N 1876, one hundred years after the signing o f the Declaration of Independence, the first telephone circuit was installed o n the Pacific Coast. This marked the beginning of a new free dom— freedom from the bonds o f distance. For today, distance is not a barrier to the trans m ission o f th o u g h t by speech. T he last h alf century has seen the development o f the tele phone from small beginnings to a vast network o f voice highways extending th ro u g h o u t the length and breadth o f the nation. From your own telephone you are within speaking distance o f over 70,000 cities and towns throughout the United States and many points in Mexico, Canada and Europe. I To the boundaries o f the nation a n d beyond— by telephone A N D telegraph com pany T he P A C IF IC T E L E P H O N E Bi! W id e A w a k e it w ai after dusk and yet the two young people sitting close together In the park made no attempt to depart Presently a keeper came In sight, going his rounds befors closing the gates. “Sorry to disturb ye,” he said to the Idlers, “but It's too late for ye to b e' silling here.” The youth was apologetic. “ I didu't realize it was so late,” be j murmured. “We are going to be mar-1 rled next year.” “ Sure, now," returned the park keeper, “do you think I'm fool enough to suppose you was married last year Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. Mr! Advertiser- YOU ARE OVERLOOKING AN OPPORTUNITY TO BRIGHTEN THE AP PEARANCE OF YOUR ADVERTISING SPACE IN THE HERALD YOU FAIL TO AVAIL YOURSELF OF OUR SPECIAL CUT SERVICE. THE SERVICE IS FREE OF CHARGE. More $ $ The Cruelest Lies The cruelest lies are often told In silence. A man may have sat In a room for hours and not opened Id s1 mouth, and yet come out of that room a disloyal friend or a vile calumniator. And how ninny loves have perished; because, from pride or spite, or diffi dence, or that unmanly shame which withholds a man from during to be tray emotion, or love, at the critical I point of the relation, he has but hung Ids head and held his tongue?—R obert1 Louis Stevenson. IF ADVERTISING MAY BE USED AS AN AGENCY OF INFORMING THE Bll PUBLIC ABOUT A BUSINESS SO AS TO INCREASE UNDERSTANDING AND GOOD WILL, OR IT MAY QUOTE PRICES TO STIMULATE BUSI NESS TODAY. IN EITHER EVENT THE ADVERTISER SPENDS HIS MONEY TO INCREASE HIS VOLUME. THAT MEANS MORE INCOME FOR HIM. S tart Is N o t A ll The winner of n long race Is us ually the one who does not start with ; a spurt. Some use up their stock of enthusiasm In compiling their New Year resolutions, and have nothing left for the harder task of living up to them. The right way to live the year Is not to start off with flying colors and then peter out. but to make It pro gressive. each day better than its predecessor, each month an Improve ment on the last.—Exchange. B ra s il Roads Overabundance of patience, plenty of pluck, and a large measure of stam ina are the three essential qualities that motorists In South America must possess, particularly when traveling over Braxlllan roads. In southern Brazil roods fire not only almost lin passable most of the time, hut are gen erally hopelessly Impos-dhle from the standpoint of touring comfort. T ra versing them constltut *s o;ie of the most severe tests to which motor cars sud tires cun be subjected. ADVERTISING SPACE THAT CARRIES AN ILLUSTRATION UN DENIABLY MAKES A MORE VIVID APPEAL THAN TYPE ALONE. AVAIL YOURSELF OF THIS FREE SERVICE. EXPLAIN IT. WE ARE GLAD TO I hi BI