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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1930)
Rheumatism? Quick relief from rheumatic pains without harmi OREGON STATE NEWS OF GENERAUNTERESI owm hairy I g g g b r A i l h u r B r ig h t.» « Principal Events of the Week Assembled for Information of Our Readers. R u s s ia B u y s L u x u r y W a r T r u t h s D is p le a s e D o n 't M a k e Y o u r s e lf S ic k . W o m e n A lw a y s P io n e e r s ▲ cave-in at the Oxbow Railway tunnel at Copperfleld resulted In the ‘death of one man and the serious In- Jury of two others. Ivor Davidaon, proprietor of the Troutdale Sand and Gravel company, was killed by a cave-ln at hla gravel pit a few days ago. The 12 large canneries In the Salem district w ill start operations for the T re e F re a k 1920 season about May 20, according Howard L. Cox, of Tulare, Calif., to announcement made a few days has discovered a phenomenon of na ago. ture In a locust tree in the T u la rj Voters of the Cove school district city park. (Trowing out of the tree la an almond sapling. The about ap approved an 28000 gymnasium bond measure at a special election held re parently waa started by an almond being tossed Into the crotch of the cently. The measure carried, 107 tree and the seed later taking root to 3L The sapling la about eight feet above Mineral bearing ore has been struck the ground. — *- ■ — on The Dalles Country club property by diamond drillers employed by an Idaho mining concern a t a depth of 263 >4 feet. BAYER A S P I H I IV HEAUHY COMPLEXIONS Healthy complexions come from healthy systems. Free the body o f poisons with F e e n -a - m liit . E ffec tiv e in smaller doses. All druggists sell th is safe, scientific la x ativ e . Feenamint HÎI FO R CO N STI PATIOS ! I 111 I IJltH ilJHiUluli,,, R tfT A lA . c o lo n s ■ • » « « n i » v r s WELL OR MONEY BACK f w r W w aUmiaatad ar laa re te n d a it I« Ui* ÌVR1TTEN ASSURANCE w esh w in ad n ■ U n D - .C J .D m o thcrKcctal and Colon aitam i U. S e n d TODAY for F R E E 100- R e £ T A l V ¿ í i o ( testfoioniala. RON CLINIC OtKRTTOW TMI» M a p ■ a f c î î r w orrrrw e E ls c tric Shoes Hungarian shoemaker baa In vented a "beatable” ehoe. An electric body le concealed between the Inner and outer soles of the shoe. The •wearer may heat It by attaching a connector in the heel with a wall plug. The heat lasts about one and a half hour* A Even good advice can fall flat. MakesLife Sweeter Children’« stomachs «our, and need an antl-add. Keep their aya- tema sweet with Phllllpa M ilk of Magnesia! When tongue or breath tella of a d d condition— correct It with a apoonful of Phllllpa. Moat men and women have been comforted by thia universal sweetener—more mother! should Invoke Its aid for their chil dren. I t la a pleasant thing to take, yet neutralises more acid than the harsher things too often employed for the purpooe. No household Should be without I t Phillips la the genuine, prescrip- tlonal product phyaidana endors« for general use ; the name is Impor ta n t "M ilk of Magnesia” has been the U. 8. registered trade mark of the Charles H. Phllllpa Chemical Co. and Ita predecessor Charles IL Phllllpa since 1875. P h illips c f Magnesia. Pasjc 3 THE HERMISTON HERALD Thursday, May 1, 1930 The R. A. Gibson aaw and planing mill and lumber yard out from W ill iams burned recently. Origin of the fire was unknown and no Insurance was carried. Registration In Marion county for the primary election totals 23,315 as compared with 22,311 last October, ac cording to figures tabulated by the county clerk. There will be an adequate tariff on cherries, whether sweetened or un sweetened, according to a telegram received at Salem from Representa tive Hawley. W illiam Aebisher, 4 years old, of Reedville. suffered the loss of the left eye and the thumb and first finger of the left hand when he held a lighted match to a dynamite cap. Gresham, thriving town in eastern Multnomah county, made a gain of al most exactly 50 per cent in population in the last decade, It waa announced by the district census bureau. The success of the county road oil operations In Lane county has led of ficials from other counties of the state to come to’ Eugene to obtain lnforma- tlon about the method* Tha. Rogue Nook inn at the approach of the Pacific highway bridge span- nlng Rogue river at Gold H ill, recent ly restroyed by fire, w ill be rebuilt at once by the owner, Dick Robinson. The grain and hay crops of Linn county are making an exceptionally rapid growth the last few days, des pite the fact that most of the grain sown last fall had a very poor start Plans for a 115,000 building to be constructed by the Albany Securities company at Albany for use by the Oregon Stages company as a stage terminal were accepted by the com pany. One hundred and seventeen ancient automobiles which have been scatter ed over vacant lots in Bend for many years hare been hauled to the city dump and will bo destroyed In a big bonfire. The city council of Eugene baa de cided to give the shade trees which add to the beauty of the city along the main thoroughfares a trimming and has appropriated 3300 to employ two experts. T H E M ARKETS Portland Wheat—Big Bend hlnestem, *1.1(; soft white and western white, 11.05; hard winter, northern spring and western red, 11.03. Hay—Alfalfa. 319 per ton; valley timothy, 120.50© 21; eastern Oregon timothy. 323.50 0 24; clover, 117; oat hay, 917; oats and vetch, 317.50@18. Butterfat—14037c. Eggs— Ranch. 21 ©24c. Cattle— Steers, good, 310.75011.25. Hogs— Good to choice, 39.50® 10.75. Lamb«—Good to choice. 99.25 910. Seattle Wheat — Soft white and weetern white, 91.07; hard winter, western red and northern spring, 31.05; Big Bend bluestem, 9J.20. Eggs—Ranch, 25 ©29c. Butterfat—39c. Cattle—Choice steers, |9.00©10.50. Hogs—Prime light, |11.25© llA 0. Lambs— Choice. 39©10. Speltane Cattle— Steers, good, 910.25®11.25. Hogs—Good to choice. $10.36©10.S0. Lam bq— Medium to good, |0.fC©10. 'all It radio or raddio, a lot of peo- aro commencing to call It soine- ig quit« different after listening to hour of belly-boo. A Californian, convicted of two rdera. baa been sentenced to be iged twice." This should double suspense. so to speak. Ft are getting along to the point pre you order e Ion of coal or letMng and the d e r t wants to know Pther yoo wish It wrapped as a NTERKST1NO new« from Rusal* Stalin, boas of Bolshevism, cele brates the new commercial treaty with Britain by ordering nine British auto mobiles, costing $13,000 to 915.000 each. In America, only Paul Block, distin guished publisher, feels that ha can afford nine Rolls Royoea. And with him it la bnaineas. He uses them to take Important advertisers wherevei they are going. When Stalin and other Russians feel that a 315.000 car Is necessary that's a sign bigger than a paa-n'a hand. I t means that somebody is be ginning to enjoy wealth, and moans nothing good for Communism. Long ago this column said to W all Street boy bankers, unable to collect money lent to Russia, "Help them to become rich, their ideas w ill change, and they w ill be more like you." In war, everything on your aide la beautiful, patriotism, on the otbei side, horrible brutality. Later you look at war from a dis tance and things seem to change. The British are outraged by a book called "A Brass Hat in No Man's Land,’’ written by the British Brlgadlei Crozier. He describes revoltlngly the execu tion of a British soldier for coward ice, describes drunkenness among of ficers, and widespread immorality, among men of all ranks. General Crosier tells how British soldiers were made bloodthirsty by ly ing tales of German atrocities to bring out the "brutelike bestiality so nec essary for victory," and adds, "the Christian churches are the finest blood lust creators we have and ol them we made free use." The London Chronicle and other papers refuse to review the book. The intelligent people of this coun try are grateful to President Hoov er for his constant warnings against Congressional extravagance. In dig nified Presidential language he says to them what David, W arfield said to Lillian Russell In the old Webar and Field days. Mr. W arfield, In the play, meets L il lian Russell In Parle, Invites her to supper, and says: "Go as far as you like." Beautiful Lillian orders ten or fifteen different dishes. Then War- field says: "Missus, because It don’t cost you nothing, don't make your self sick. I t doesn't cost Congress anything to spend billions, taken from the people, but If Congress goes too far. It w ill make the country sick. Prosperity w ill not boom. If you persuade the man with money that It is better to lnveet In tax-exempt se curities than In enterprises giving em ployment That w ill happen If gov ernment reaches In and takes too much from incomes. A woman 50 years old, formerly an actress, murdered her beat friend, a woman twenty years younger, then killed herself. The police say "jealousy.” The younger woman, according to theli theory, waa Invited, the older woman not Invited, to some social function. That probably does not tell all the story. But If the Angel Gabriel has In hie records any pages devoted to savage killing, the word “jealousy" appears In them often. "Love le strong as death; jealousy is cruel aa the grave; the coals th- ro of are coals of fire, which hath a most vehement flam e" Oklahoma unveils a fine status Io the pioneer woman. Women have al ways been earth's real pioneers. In Ideas and in action. Far back In the Stone Age they .had produced all the grains we know by developing the seed* of wild plants. They tamed female buffaloes to pro vide milk for their children, planted gardens, changed hnman beings from a nomadic to a settled life. They are the pioneers of the fron tiers and pioneers In ideas and In re ligion. The Influence of m othetj on their eons in the last million years has changed men from prognathons canni bals to semi-civillted money-grubbers I t is a great Improvement. Jack Dempsey, once heavyweight champion, w ill go to Africa to kill lions, elephants, giraffes, hippopota muses and rhinoceroses. On one of his "safaris” (that’s what the British call a hunting expedition) M r. Demp sey thinks he may pick out a colored heavyweight. Plenty of Zulus that could fill Mad ison Square Garden. The difficulty would be to make them endure prosperity and bootleg products after they go* there. I f Mr. Dempsey should meet one of the big red haired, eight-foot tall gor illas of the gaboon country, he'd he earprised That kind of heavyweight could etroll aloeg dragging Dempsey with one hand. Careers with the other. ■C. •»»* w *a e GIVE NEW UNES TO PRINT FROCK; tweed from hat to HEMLINE IT H entirely new silhouettes, W with soft feminizing bows, with graceful and novel peplums (see pic ture), with myriads of capelet* with sprightly prints galore, thus does fash Ion continue to vamp us. For a fact, never, at least not In the memory of most of ns, have the wiles of the mode Calcium , Phosphorus Store proved so Irresistible. Take It In the matter of the perfect ly charming little print 'silk frocks which are gladdening the whole spring ... To Insure healthy, robust animals, time landscape with their presence. able to produce the milk needed this | coining winter. Or. L. A. Muynard of the Cornell university agricultural ex periment station says that cows must have plenty of calcium and phos phorus during the summer. The usual summer ration of pasture and grain, he says, does not contain enough of these element* Further, experiments show that cows will make better use of mineral supplements during the pasture season than at other times. The liberal feeding of minerals now will not only provide for current needs but will also enable the animal to store up reserves for the period when tbelr assimilation of food Is more dif ficult. A mixture of equal parts of steam bone meal, finely ground limestone and salt, or a mixture of two parts of the bone meal and one part of salt makes a good mineral supple ment. The simplest way Is to place one of these mixtures In a box In the barnyard where the cows can eat it at will. Some sort of a cover should be built over the box to protect It from rain. It Is a good thing to give the cows access to one of these mix tures even when the grain mixture contains minerals, because the grain fed during the summer may not con tain enough. A better way to feed the minerals, bnt one that takes more time, Is to mix three to four ounces of the mixture with one of the grain feeding each day. All animals, wheth er dry br milking, should be fed the extra minerals. Aside from ctffnmon salt, calcium and phosphorus are the only min erals that are needed as a mineral supplement. The pur'chnse of a com plex mineral mixture containing laxa tives and tonics Is a waste of money, says Doctor Maynard, SU M M E R M IN ER A L S N E E D E D B Y C O W S' Up Energy for Winter. Water Materially Helps Maintain Flow of Milk Water Is as necessary to life as food, but how rarely Is It given ad equate attention, particularly In the summer. To maintain the summer i milk flow nt the highest pitch a liberal I supply of pure water Is needed. No 1 matter how good the pustures. th« - cotvs cannot produce well If they are deprived of water. For both digestion and assimilation of food, water Is nec essary. It regulates the temperature of the body, and provides for the wa ter content of the milk, which Is more thnn 80 per cent by weight of Its vol ume Experience has proved thal cows In milk need approximately three pounds of water for every pound of milk produced. Very heavy pro ducers then muy Deed from ten tc fifteen gallons In 24 hours. During summer many herds are not supplied with enough water to meet this need i f the water Is not before the cows all the time, they should have access to It at least twice a day. preferably three times during the hot weather I f this le done there will not be a falling off In the milk supply. white or light backgrounds. The new printed taffetas are amazingly chic, and the dainty printed cotton nets are ever so lovelg. Tweed for Spring. Add tweed to tweed, and what's the answer 1 According to that which leading stylists are telling us over and over again thia season, the sum total la nothing less than outstanding ' cldc for the costume The models In the lower picture de clare Just that—the vogulahnesa of D on’t wain until your last/mend desertS/you— I ET Sir Walter Raleigh met-' -» low down that powerful pipe of yours I Sir Walter wz// do it. It’s a particularly mild and mellow mixture o f excellent tobaccos. And the tobacco is wrapped in heavy gold foil to keep it fresh and fragrant to the last pipeful in the tin. T U N E I N o a " T k « R « l« l|li U rn « * * ararv Friday, 10:00 to n :o o p. at. (Naw York Tim«) o»«r the W BA F coot-to-cool network S .C . kN. Inspiration in This Winsome Frock. really, now, who can think of any the ensemble made of handsome tweed woman of her acquaintance who has from hat to hemline. For that mat not yielded to the lure of at least one, ter some of the very smartest tweed If not a half-dozen more or less of costumes go so far as to Include shoes and handbag of matching tweed. these adorable fantasies? One reason that fashloidsts are In To milady who Is thinking of adding yet another print to her collection, the spired to work tweed for all It Is winsome frock In the picture Is sure worth tills spring Is thal the light- welglitiiess, the sheerness and th« to prove an Inspiration. The print "springy" colors of the new tweeds crepe of which this dress Is made In- termlngles the loveliest yellows and make these weaves eminently prac capucine shades and browns on a tical nnd wearable at the Immediate creamy beige background. Being thor- moment; In fact the costume Ideal foi ougly style-conscious, the young wom sports, motoring, town wear and coun try clah during the coming months will an wears with this delightsome frock he most often interpreted In lacy brown kid pumps and a brown felt i hat To be correctly costumed, one's tweeds. The swunky sports ensemble to the i footwear Hiid- headwear Bhiipiy must , enter Into the color scheme, which sc- right In the picture (laiura M I’lnnte. ' counts for thé conspicuous dlspluy of the pretty blond actress of cinema I colorful kid shoes In all leading hoot- fume, posing) Is fashioned of a gray eries this season. Likewise, the new and green tweed mixture. The one straws take on the colors of the rain piece dross Is made with a square bow, as do the new felts, for the felts neck. In creating the hat. frock nnd are still smart, that Is If they are Jacket of the same, the designer of worn during the practical and sports this costume multiplies the modish- ness of grayish-green tweed by three. hours of the day. The other charming ensemble, which Returning to the subject of prints. It la Interesting to note bow certain Is of beige tweed, arrived Just recently S ir 'WX lter R aleigh If*/ t j e and I t ’t milder A sen Hatchery Huh for Poultry Profits R . I. Reds, R . I . W h ite « , W h ite Rocks, Barred Rocks, Black Minorca«, Black Giants,White Leghorns— all from carefully super- vised flock* Alvo W . L. Pullets,year ling hens and day old turkey* Order now to insure delivery whan Writ» to r Special Di m ount. 10099 live delivery guaranteed. ' years' reputation your safeguard. (MV TOM) QUEEN 2 4 2 0 1 s t Avomse HATCHERY Protect Your Upholstering W ith SEAT COVERS Poor Market for Dairy e nlso manufacture Auto Tops, Cur tins and Awning* W rite for price* Agents Wanted. W ESTERN SEAT COVER CO. 22 Alder 8treet, Portland, Oregon. Products Is Advantage It la generally conceded that a pool market for dairy products work« to the advantage of the efficient dairy farmer because many of those prodne- Ing at a margin are bound to go undei In the crash of butterfat prices. There fore tlie efficiency with which a farm er feeds determines whether he will remain among those producing at a prfiflt. Herein lies the one great hop« of the producer of dairy products, foi In the narrowing of his Held of com petition. low prices nt the same time provide for under production and a subsequent rise In price*. M an Cables Shakespeare A cablegram for William Shake speare awaits him at the office of Miss A. Justins, the mayor of Strat ford-on-Avon, the hard’s birthplace. It wus eent by a Toronto, Ontario, man, and Is addressed "William Shakespeare. care of the Mayor,” and states that the sender had seen the film of "The Taming of the Shrew,” and thal he wished to know bow much money Shakespeare wants for the rights of any plnys he has writ ten or any ho might be writing In future. Dairy Hints I 91 1 14 I 1 1 I I I I I H H 14 , »44-4 1 A good pasture Increase« the "con tent” In contented rows. • • • Soy beans are an excellent feed for dairy cows. They lake the place of linseed meal or cottonseed meal. • e Carry Your Medicine In Your Handbag ss e So long as the heifer la on excellent white clover and blue grass pnstnra It will not be necessary to feed her grain. e • e About 87 per cent of milk la water For plenty of >nllk. don't forget *to give the cow all the water «he care» to drink. e e a Cow« should he kept In well llrhted well ventilated, dean burnt Flies run be kept nut by hanging burlap over the windows end d-mrs. s e e Two S trikin g Modes for Spring. ;-»e«»«e>»eeee types bps worn at certain hours of the day or for certain occasion* For In- afance. the little dark yet gay prints ■f the churai-ter In the plrtare are con «lilt-red the correct tiling for practical utllltsrisn wear. In this genre the new pin -dots should also be classed. Ity the way. If you possess not some Feed which would taint the mil) one thing or another of pin-dotted ma should n<»t he given Immediately he T rial this season, any a coat, or a fore or during the process of milking 'ilouse. a frock suit or ensemble—well. e e e K en you are certainly losing not In The partly covered top (wall. In somi •he game of fashion. form. Is preferable to the open top When It comes to dreaay and formal Palls and other dairy nienslls should evening mrv’es. prints make a sudden he >f the seam lees type, or fltishe,' change, taking oo patterning«-blu with Un Io cover up the seama old and vivid, very frequently oo from P a ri* Ro It la not only th« American woman who has become tweed-minded, for la Parietenne Is wearing tweed this spring with equal eethnalasm. The designer. Io this In stance. carries the tweed Ides thmifgh out the costume In that the hat Is of the Identical tweed of the Jnckei-sult . also the Jersey blouse la t weed !rimmed Favor tor hlsck-and white tweed le expreaeed to no little extent In smart rlrcles. Il Is cnmddrred ths height of fashloti to wear with these hlsck and white suits of twseil Mark and while kid footwear J u lia n ir rro M i.K T . I * ISS * W «scare M e w e e e v « U a t v a l O u r V e g e ta b le C o m p o u n d la also sold ia chocolate coated ta b lets, ju s t ns e ffe c tiv e as th e liq u id fo rm . Endonad by thia medicine is during the three turity, maternity 9H out o j 100 n p o rt bonrfit chaERnkhantt» • fe regetable Compound W N. U , PORTLAND, NO. 18-193»