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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1930)
OREGON STATE NEWS OF GENERAUNTEREST Principal Eventa of the Week Assembled for Information of Our Readers. T h is • THE •, KITCHEN CABINET W e e k b y A R T H U R BR ISB ANE Mr. Morrow Starts Fine Girls Many Bull, D onkey, G oat Race Torturing Witnesses Dwight W. Morrow, a national char The population at the state peniten acter, former partner In J. P. Morgan tiary at Salem has reached a new high I A Co., who has since done excellent work as ambassador to Mexico, has mark, with 900 prisoners on the regis started his campaign for the Senate ter. in New »Jersey. The first tire of the year In Crater national forest was started recently Mr. Morrow is able. I t he goes to the by lightning striking a tree in the Ap Senate, he will get for hie State any ! thing that is to be got. He understands plegate district near Copper. 1 the art of getting. Many w ill vote foi Organized labor of Eugene will spon him because he wants to go to the sor a Fourth of July celebration in Eu Senate himself. gene, and preliminary steps will be Men as rich aa Mr. Morrow have ' usually sent dummies to the Senate, taken at once, it Is announced. 1 to do what they wanted done. To see The cherry crop In Lane county will ! such a man willing to go himself Is s be better than It was indicated two i pleasant change. or three weeks ago, according to C. E. Stewart, county fruit Inspector. The ambassador says the federal Owing to lack of funds the city coun government Is too far away to attend cil of Roseburg has deferred the wid to prohibition details in the States, says the prohibition law should be ening of the main streets. The esti repealed, and prohibition taken out of mate for improving 10 blocks was ap the constitution. Each State should be proximately >10,000. allowed to handle Its own drink prob Rocking of the road leading from the lem, just as It deals now with Its Oregon coast highway north of Flor horse thief or divorce problems. ence to the ocean beaches between the — I t will be an interesting campaign. mouth of the Siuslaw river and Heceta The State la notoriously wet. Mr. Mor head has been started. row would probably be elected but tor The town council of Lakeview has the fact that he Is In favor of the authorized the Immediate paving of League of Nations. Difficult situation 10 blocks in the business section. Rob for a man. honestly seeking an oppor ert Gould, city engineer of Bend, has tunity to prove that one successful In been engaged to supervise the work. business could be useful In public K . A. Toung, 65, driller for an oil office. (© , IM S . Weetera M v u s p o Union. I LIBERAL FEEDING OF HEIFERS BEST Specialist Offers Suggestions to Meet Conditions. Feed a liberal amount of feed tt tbe yearling heifer and watcb bei grow. Tbat Is tbe recommendation madt by J. C. Nlsbet, extension dairyman Kansas Stats Agricultural college, to all dairymen. “By lack of sufficient and the right kind of feed the yearling heifer will uerer develop the size she should aod will mature much later than the well fed heifer.” gays this dairy specialist He offers four rations to increase the returns from tbe yearling heifer. • First ration: Feed all the alfalfa huy she will e a t Under ten months— feed two to three pounds of a mix ture of corn chop, oats, bran, and oil meal and 12 to 20 pounds of silage per day. Over ten months— feed small amounts of corn chop. Increase tbe silage to 20 to 30 pounds dally. Second ration; To be fed where al falfa hay Is not available but silage Is plentiful. Feed all the roughage she will eat. In addition feed IS to 30 pounds of silage per day. The heifer will need three to flve pounds of grain mixture of corn, oats, and oil meal in which the oil meal makes up at least one-hulf of the grain ration. Third ration: Where alfalfa bay is available but there Is no silage: Feed company in Coos county, was killed the heifer all the alfalfa hay she will Twenty American girls went to play eat and three to flve pounds a day of when an automobile went over a grade golf In England. Eleven have already near Remote on the Coos Bay-Rose won British golf matches. Not a bad a mixture of equal parts oats, corn, burg highway. I t is believed Toung average. All parts of the United States bran, and oil meal. Fourth rutioo: Where neither al fell asleep. produce girls with extraordinary men falfa hay nor silage is available: tal and physical powers. California, Plans and specifications for the Purchase alfalfa to form one-half to Hendricks bridge-Doyle hill section of where you grow In sunshine summer one-third of the total roughage con the McKenzie highway covering nine and winter, produces the unequaled sumed dully. Feed grain as In ratio» Helen Wills. three. miles have been received by the Lane county court from the state highway This country has no monopoly on department fine, adventurous young women. Amy The annual picnic at Pleasant H ill, Johnson, golden-haired 22-year-old which has been held since pioneer British girl, flying from England to Early pasture for the dairy cow Is dafs, w ill be held this year June 14, Australia alone, landed in India, two not going to make tbe owner any flays ahead of all masculine records. it has been announced. The Christian money if he assumes thut washy Miss Johnson, safely past the danger Endeavor society of that place will grass will entirely take the place of ous Indian desert, Is beating all world grain feeding. In that case the pas have charge. records, in a tiny Moth plane, smaller ture results in a heavy strain on her. The last of the salvage from the than Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis. She will soon be In poor condition, Admiral Benson, which was wrecked Her trip covers 11,000 miles, and she falling off in her milk flow, and illy near the mouth of the Columbia, has expects to fly back In the same plane. prepared for the later test of 'Jiol To save weight, the young lady, been brought to Astoria. I t Includes weather, flies and short pasture. winches, anchors, chains, port lights every time she lands and takes a bath, It Is much better to keep up the borrows a change of under-clothing. grain feeding at a fair profit now, In and other heavy equipment order to Insure a steadier milk flow George Lambrith of Alpine dropped That is racing. throughout the summer, and to keep dead Sunday at a ball game In which Ralph Sanders started from Harling- tlie cows in good physical condition. he was playing. He had been batting, The correct ration for cows on pas ton, Texas, bound for New York, riding when the umpire called him “o u t” a large black bull. He w ill race with ture, according to the Missouri expert As he turned to leave the plate he Benjamin Stack, who starts thirty days men! station is: 800 to 400 pounds of pitched forward on his face. ground corn. 200 pounds of ground later, driving a goat and a donkey. A 2-yfear-old horse fell Into a 60-foot Mr. Stack bets that he w ill get to oats or bran, 100 pounds cottonseed well on the Martin ranch on the Lex New York first in spite of Sanders’ 30 meal, a good mineral mixture. The minerals will furnish lime and phos ington market road near Heppner. He days’ start. phate to make milk, keep the cow In was standing on the top of the well condition, and help to develop the calf That is unimportant in days of air drinking from a watering trough when planes and automobiles, but everything she Is carrying. It mukes the cow the timbers gave way under him. strange interests us. Fashionable ladles more resistant to abortion and pos The unusual eight of a rainbow at In the Medici days liked hideout tibly also more resistant to flies. night was seen by a number of Glen dwarfs; old kings had their “court dale people recently at 10:15 when a fools’’ ; the great astronomer, Tycho complete rainbow arched the north Brahe, made all at his table be sll*at western sky with a silvery full moon when an ldlpt eating scraps st bis feet Alfnifa and sweet clover, when In mumbled words supposed to have in the opposite side of the heavens. full bloom, are less likely to cuuse deep meaning. A total of 11,841 loans, representing The "cruelty” society, of course, will bloating than the immature duvet an aggregate of 128,328,625, were au see that the bull, goat and donkey are where wet with dew or rain. Keep cows off the posture until dew and thorised under the state veterans re properly shod. rain have dried. Allow free access lief act up to March 1 of this year, ac The Jugo-Slavlan King Alexander to salt and slaked lime. Feed cow- cording to a report from Frank Moore, secretary of the state bonus commie is accused of allowing police to torture before turning them Into the pasture political prisoners. One brought to When sweet clover Is the exclusive sion. court in a wheel chair, says be was roughage ration and has been fed fot Mr. and Mrs. R. Alexander, promin beaten, tied with ropes, whipped with some time It may cause death from ent Pendleton residents, were felicl- canes, at intervals ail night long. bleeding. The hemorrhages occur In ted by friends there and by telegraph Other prisoners were treated in sim large swellings shout the rump or elsewhere In the body or internally and radio from distant points, the oc ilar fashion. Civilisation, backward in some Such poisoning most commonly occurs casion being their 50th wedding anni versary and the 80th birthday of Mr. places, in others makes progress. Not when the sweet clover Is moldy, hav long ago, men accused were tortured ing been killed by frost or withered Alexander. everywhere, to make them tell what In ant man. or when old sweet clovei A flaming meteor, said to have been they knew. Torture Is no longer legal. Is excessively fed. Dehorning or css the else of an airplane, was reported (ration Is likely to he followed by fatal to have fallen near Conway, Or. T. When Queen Elizabeth decided to bleeding when such sweet clover has F. Mills, Pendleton angler, reported cut off the head of her lover, Essex, been the exclusive roughage feed o' seeing the white-hot rock plainly. He she was praised for her restraint In cattle. said It fell somewhere in the Bine not having him put to the torture. His abject submission, and fear of things mountains. he might have said, under torture, about the woman whom he indiscreetly THE M ARKET* Ridiculous Is not the word to de described as an ugly old hunchback, Portland Wheat—Big Bead blnestem, *L 1 *% ; might explain the unusual gentleness. scrilie the quality of milk from cows running on weedy pasture fields, ob soft white, western white, 81.03 H ; Many remember when the Panama serves the Farm Journal. Ragweed hard winter, northern spring, western Canal was suggested, how the gigan pigweed and goldenrod cause milk red. »1.01%. that Is way off when II comes to fla tic sum staggered imagination. Hay—Alfalfa, >20 per ton; valley We lent forty times that sum to ror. to say nothing of reduced flow st timothy, 880.50031; eastern Oregon Europe to help the processes of kill this time of year timothy, 181.50024; clover. *17; oat ing. and staggered nobody but little But cows don’t eat these weeds from hay, *17; eats and vetch, *17.50018 people that sold Liberty bonds far be choice. Cows win let the weeds almw If yon will feed plenty of good rough low par. Butte rfat—81035c. age- plus grain and supplements, e r a Eggs—Ranch. >1034«. Now the W ar Department studies ready mixed dairy feed. Cattle—Steers, good, »11.2501185. Sheep for weed killing and for wool, the plans for a bridge over the Hudson Hogs—Good to choice, *9.500 I L River st Fifty-seventh st. in New York. dairy cows for milk—thufa the bee' Lambs—Good to choice, *8.50010. It would cost 3180,000.000. but that dairy program. agitates no one. Wheat—Bott white, western white, W e have passed into the billion dol hard winter, western red and northern lar era. Mere millions attract little T he separator should he placed level spring, *1.04; Big Bend blues tern. attention. . ano firmly larited to ■ Mixing founds *1.16. lion. 1« prevent vibration of the ma Dr. Sundstroem of the University of Eggs—Ranch, 25029«. chine II should run anxadMy. to pre California has cured cancer In rats by Butle rtst lie . vent mas nt hniterfaf. In tbe skim keeping them in tanks under low s t Cattle—Choice steers, *11011 AO. Don’t Stop Grain Feed During Pasture Season Immature Sweet Clover Likely to Cause Bloat Weedy Pastures Injure High Quality of MiU Bolt the Separator Hogs—Prime light. »1OJO01L Lambs— Choice. *901*. Cattle—Steers, good. *10.3*011. 1 to choice. *10 28010.50. Pa<e X THE HERMISTON HERALD Thursday, May 22, 1930 The “to w oxygen tension' kill the rats, hut cured 83 per cent at the rats subjected to It and afflicted with cancer. If diminished oxygen ton- Bleu kills cancer, perhaps tt. •0 inltk as well as excessive wear Of the machine To prevent undue at rain and «rear the eetwralor should he started at low speed and gradual!« raised to full Sfieed T be howl «tumid lae titled with warm water when started lufak< -u* dust and odors and keep the m ilt “W s th in k th a t eonnplcuous •v e n ts . s trik in g experience*. e x a lt ed momenta, have most to do w ith o u r c h aracte r and capacity. Wo a rc w ron g. Common da y*, m onot onous hours, wearisom e paths, ta ll the re a l story. T h e vision may bo daw n, th e dream m ay aw a k e n on some m oun tain top, bu t the teat, t h * triu m p h is a t t h * fo o t o f th» m o u n tain , on tho level p lain .” SUSTAINING SOUPS One may prepare with milk vege table soups which are most nourish ing. The vege tables may be as- p a ra g n s , peas, beans of various kinds, celery, pota toes. turnips, car rots, spinach, on ions, corn, cabbage or some of these in combination. The soup should be slightly thickened. The following will be a good basic recipe: Thicken two cupfuls of milk with one tablespoonfnl of flour and tbe same of butter well blended, add sea sonings and two-thirds of a cupful of cooked vegetables chopped, mashed or strained. I f tha vegetable Is not starchy, more flour may be added. Vegetable Vitamin Soup.—Take one cupful each of diced carrots, chopped onion, one and one-half cupfuls of chopped celery, one capful of diced turnips, two cupfuls of diced pota toes, two quarts of meat stock, one cupful of tomato juice, two tahlespoon- fuls of chopped green pepper, six tablespoonfuls of butter and a few dashes of pepper. Brown the vege table», except the potatoes. In the but ter, add three teaspoonfuls of salt and one-fourth teaspoonful of pepper. Boil twenty minutes and add the potatoes. Bean 8oup<—Soak one cupful of dried beans over night in a quart of water. Cook In the same water until so ft I f onion flavor is liked add a slice or two to the beans while cook ing. Mash the beans through a sieve and add water, milk or meat broth enough to make a full quart. Add a little flour to bind and keep the thick part of the beans from settling to the bottom. Tbe flour may be added by- mixing It with equal parts of butter. Season to taste and serve hot. Garn ish with a sprinkling of minced par sley. Slices of lemon and hard-cooked egg are liked for another garnish. Turnip 8oup.—Heat four cupfuls of milk In a double boiler, add one table spoonful of flour with two tablespoon- fuls of butter, then add two capfuls of fresh grated turnip, one teaspoonful of grated onion, ooe and one-fourth teaspoonfuis of salt, a half teaspoon ful of sugar. Cook until the turnip Is s o ft Sprinkle with parsley and serve. Serve with croutons. Onion Soup.—Cook six medium- sized onions (chopped) In a very little water until tender. Add two table- spoonfuls of fat and cook down until the onions are yellow. Mix them with three cupfuls of meat broth, season well. Add a little water to four table spoonfuls of flour; when well blended add to the soup, cook until the stnrch la thoroughly cooked. Serve with grated cheese sprinkled over the soup plates. CHIC GLOVES ARE IMPORTANT; OUTFITTING OF LITTLE GIRLS USBANDS and fathers please take notice, from now on the dress allowance for wives and daughters must be» Increased. Henceforth and until further notice the budget must be made to cover the expense of gloves sangtng from tbe most formal types to every conceivable kind such as time place and costume may demand. At every Paris couture opening, the glove Is being made a theme of out- H tued »y «ta m ing? lustration herewith carries the point Get poisons out o f tbe . ___ Fees-a-mlnt, the Chewing Gam Mss» with emphasis. The graceful drooping leghorn dve. Smaller doses effective which this little girl la wearing la I token In thie form. A modem. I trimmed with a broad velvet ribbon tifle, tamily laxative. Safe and matched to tbe rose color print of tbe frock. Wblch la as tt should be, for even in the little folks* realm, tbe costume must present a related color scheme from head to foot to be fash ionable. In this Instance tbe winsome INSIST ON IME GENUINE Feenamint FOR CONSTIPATION Brutue H ero o f P lay According to the general judgment of critics and actors, Brutus is tbe hero of the play “Julius Caesar.” Ha speaks 727 lines; Antony, 327 lines; Cassius, 507 lines and Caesar, 154 lines Richard Burbage first played the role of Brutus LUMBAGO? A pain in the lower part of your back can torture you. But not for long, if you know Bayer Aspirin. These harmless, pleasant tablets take away the misery o f lumbago, rheumatism, neuralgia, headaches, toothaches, and systemic pains of women. Relief comes promptly; M complete. Genuine Aspirin cannot drees is made of shuntung printed In depress the h eart Look for the a delicate patterning which sllhon- 1 Bayer cross, thus: Glovoa B ecom e Im portant. standing importance. Perfectly fas cinating long gloves In pastel tints are registering for formal evening wear. A preferred type la the 16- button mousquetalre suede glove In sucb baby colors as pink, pale bine and light yellow. Worn with the right evening gown, they create noth ing less than a sensation. Long white glace kid gloves are in flemand but the eggshell and suede tints are newer. Very handsome and exclusive types finish their top edge« with borders of rhinestone or beud embroidery. Offsetting these fanciful creations are the very long black ■uede gloves, the same considered tree •hie worn with colorful evening gowns. Quaintest of all are the very long and not so long black lace mitts which sre complementing the gown made all ¡>f lace, also smnrtly In evidence with demure frocks which are sleeved with cunning short puffs. In selecting gloves one needs to con sider the style, the color and even the leather in relation to the costume and ettes blue and rose against a white background. Designers, manufacturers, also the family dressmaker and home-sewing women In general are rejoicing in tbe wealth of lovely materials whlcb thia season are at their disposal for the making of little folks’ apparel They cits particularly the prettlnesa and at the same time practicability of print ed shantungs and printed linens whlcb flourish In the rubric showings, like wise the wearableness and attractive ness of printed crepe. In making up youngsters’ fnshions the very style points whlcb are con tributing so conspicuously to the smartness of adult fashions are be ing exploited in the children’s realm with utmost enthusiasm. For Instance, the little dress In the picture Is styled with the popular cope sleeves, the clrcular-flure hemline, and a moat sophisticated Jabot made of self-ma terial. Another mode which appears In rep lica of tlie costumes designed for mother and grown-up sister is the Jacket suit, made of lively print silk. Moat cunning model! In miniature are laying siege Io little daughter’s heart Outstanding among these Is the Jack- et-nnd-sklrt suit of printed crepe, as F am ous P en nant In M useum The home-bound pennant of the battleship Oregon, preserved in the Naval Academy museum. Is 510 foot long, representing one foot for every man aboard the vessel at the time It visited the Asiatic station after the Spanish-American war. The pennant Is of silk, and was made by the ~ ~ section. u u a k a n i t r u All Dmsgiete. ONSTIPATION VARIOUS GOOD THING S N atio n ’s In fa n c y This is the season of the year when Iamb Is at Its best. A crown roast of lamb makes a most Imposing appearance for a dinner. The nice thing about tlie crown roast Is that it Is so easy to carve. There is an old saying among tbe French that it is as disgraceful for a host to be Ignorant of curving as it Is to have a fine library and not know how to read. The art of carving is a most useful and graceful accomplishment, and it should form a part of the education of every young man and woman. Be gin with the easy meats to carve, and the more complicated will not seem so overwhelming. The carver's seat should be high enough to bring the elbows on a Hue with the table, with ample room for moving the arms. The cut of meat or fowl should be placed on a platter large enough to allow the joint to be carved without danger to the doth. The garnishment should never inter fere with the work of the rarver. Such gamlajiea as parsley and watercress may be laid aside and will not prove objectionable. With a crown runs! all tbe carver has to do is to cut down between every rib. Each piece la then ready to serve. Cocktail Sauce.— Those who enjoy the shrimp or eyster cocktails or the simpler one of fruit pretmred from grapefruit or oranges will like a home made sauce. Take two teaspoonfuis of grated horse radish, three table- spoonfuls of rntsup, one teaspoonful of salt, two tableopoonfuls of lemon Juice, four tableopoonfuls of grape fruit Juice and one-fourth of a ten spoonful of tabasco sauce, .'fix all the Ingredients and pour over the cocktail. For spring lamb mint sauce Is fu vored. Crush a bunch of mint, cover with 0 tablespoonful of each of water and lemon Juice. boiling hot. add a tahtespoonful of powdered sugar and serve. Have the mint line!/ chopped. Serve msyonnnlse on rooked cnull flower Instead of the usual butter or rream sauce. In 1775 the estimuted population of the American colonies was 2JMO.OOOL The population of the principal col onies was: Massachusetts, 335,000; Pennsylvania, 800,000; New York, 190,000; North Carolina, more 265,000, and Virginia, 450,000. the oiher accessories. For afternoon longer slip-ons have became the rage. These are usually of suede nr mocha In off-whits shades, yellow oi pinkish beige to blend with tbs stockings as a rule. A very smart color note for thia season Is to ha vs gloves, hat, bag, and shoes of one shade. Pull-ons with decorated flare ruffs are also considered good style. Sev eral Interesting types are ahown la tbe npi>er picture, also the newest lace mitts With her handsome gown of white oemherg moire, the evening-attired ady as illustrated is wearing an ex quisite pair of long pale blue glace (Id gloves Rhinestone buckles and * bow on one shoulder and at the belt yrovlde the only trimming for bar no dlahty fitted at-fh e-w a lst frock. Attire far Small Girls. The cn!! of the wide-brimmed hat Is heard In the children's realm. From Juvenile headquarters comes the wetcoine news that lovely big leg horns Ilian ahi'-h there Is no mors flattering type for youngsters ha* come Into Ita own once more. A cay print frock r<>t>t>ed with a rib lw-ii sashed or handed leghorn worn by a dainty little min* never falls to make a “perfect picture." and the II- A Sour Stomach P rop erly H atted and Frocked. well as those of shantung or linen For every day wear polka doited nt fects are perhaps In the majority Foi tola the pleated skirt buttons un te biouse, while older girls may If they so desire And cleverly devised yoke shirts which fit over frilly turk I us ot dotted swlsa. handkerchief linen; also cotton net. which Is so very | m > i < u I si this season for frocks and tit« hlonae Very t-burinlng printed silks which are designed for tbe very young are imlterned In qnnlnt Dresden effects, tlep ldliig children at |dtty Sulla of monotone po.tel spun alike »r ot flat c-re|ie In ,t solid color are nlao roguish for little datignter. J U L IA B< r m H I I.K T i * 1*1* Wmt-r» n.w»*a*M l.'aton.! In the same time it takes a of soda to bring a little temporary relief of gaa and sonr stomach, Phillips Milk of Magnesia lias acid ity completely checked, and the di gestive organa all trnnqulllgad. Once you have tried this form of relief ynu will cease to worry about your diet and experience a new freedom In eating. This pleasant preparation Is Just as good for children, ton. Use tt whenever coated tongue or fe ll* breath signals need of a sweetener. Physicians will tell you that every spoonful of Phillips Milk of Mag nesia neutralizes many times ita votuase In add. Get the gentility tbe name Phillips Is important Imitations do not art tbe samel PHILLIPS o f Magnesia W. N. U , Portland, Na. 3 1 - 1 0 *