Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1930)
Thursday, May 29, 1930 THE HERMISTON HERALD OREGON STATE NEWS OF 6ENERAUNTEREST Principal Events of the Week Assembled for Information of Our Readers. The 36th year of the Eugene Bible university closed with the commence ment exercises on May 24. Strawberry growers engaged in sell ing berries will nob be required to take out the usual nurserymen’s license when they sell strawberry plants on the side. Fire of undetermined origin gutted the Deuel block at Medford, causing property damage estimated by owner* at 3200,000. The business district was threatened. Plans to merge the Wasco, Sherman and Hood RiTer and Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson councils of the Ameri can Legion Into a district council are under way. Figures at the state penitentiary re vealed that Lane county, except for Multnomah county, headed the list of those sending prisoners to the penal institution. Eighteen mile* of new telephone line w ill be built in the Siuelaw na tional forest during the coming sum mer, it was announced by R. S. Shel ley, supervisor. A report was current at Pendleton that the contract had been let to Hur ley A Son of Moscow, Idaho, for work on the Camas grade section of the Pendleton-John Day highway. H arry Lane, 3-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lane of the Liberty district, died In a hospital at Salem as the result of an infection which developed from a tonsil operation. The dates of the Grizzly Gulch cele bration to be staged by Grant county residents has been set for June 6, • and 7. The “Days of ’62 celebration,** an annual event, also will be staged. The Marlon county court has been petitioned by timber men to close sev eral miles of the county road above Finger with a view of lessening fire hazards and also expediting logging operations. Markers are being placed on all graves of world war veterans who are burled In Eugene. The stones are fur nished by the government and are be ing erected by members of the Amer ican Legion post The city commission of Bend has passed an ordinance forbidding the operation of gasoline or steam-powered boats on the Deschutes river within the city limits, so as not to disturb the nesting of ducks. Acreage of alfalfa is rapidly increas ing in Lane county, according to O. S. Fletcher, county agricultural agent I t is expected that 1600 acres will be planted this year as compared with 1000 acres last year, the agent said. A new stage line for the hauling of express and passengers will be inaug urated between Marshfield and Cres cent City before July 1, at which time the new federal contract for mail serv- ice between the two points w ill be- come effective. W ork on the market roads in Baker county ia well under way, with pros pect that practically all such roads In sdme sections of the county w ill be placed in first-class condition within the next few weeks, County Judge Baird has announced. Poorer by a dollar, which has been safely removed from his throat by Dr. Arthur Jones, throat specialist of Boise, W alter Struthers, 16, is recov ering from an unusual accident The Vale youth put the dollar in his mouth and, presto. It was gone. Apple thinning wae begun In several orchards of the Rogue River valley and w ill be well under way soon, and will cause more work this year than In the past due to the heavy set of the fruit. Pears also will be thinned this season more than in the past TH E M AR KET« Portland Wheat—Big Bend Uuestem, 31.17%; soft white, western white, 31.04%; hard winter, northern spring, western red, 31.02 %. Hay—Alfalfa, 320 per ton; valley timothy, 320.60021; eastern Oregon timothy, 323.50024; clover, 317; oat hay, 317; oata and vetch. 317.50013. But terfat—30033c. Eggs—Ranch. 20®24c. Cattle—Steers, good. 311-50013. Hogs—Good to choice, 10.50011. Lnaahn—Good to chocle, 3300. Seattle Wheat—Soft white, western white, hard winter, western red and northern spring. 31-04; Big Bend Meeetem 31-17. Eggs—Ranch. 11038e. Betterfat—37 c. Cattle— Choice steers. 811011-5«. -Prim e light, 3 1 1 4 *0 1 1 -« . «d, H - 7 1 0 1 * « Hogs—Good te chetee, t i l . to good. 3 * 0 » - « T h is WHAT BRIDESMAIDS WILL WEAR; CHIC PRINT JACKET COSTUMES W e e k ARTHUR BRISBANE C o m fo rt fo r Drys T h e W o rld W ill Last F reed o m o f the Skies Happy IT H such a wealth of entrancing W materials as the fabric field offers for the fashioning of frocks for tbe GENTLE BULL IS BIG FARM MENACE Prohibitionists w ill find comfort In the Pennsylvania election. Recent wet and dry pells seemed to indicate that the whole country is wet and longing for beer. Gifford Pinchot ran for gov ernor of Pennsylvania as an ardent dry and won. There is a difference “Bulls with bad reputations must be tween straw votes and real votes. watched closely, and it is the so-called gentle bull, not the vicious one, that The Literary Digest wet-dry poll most certainly kills his victim,” says discovers that 43 States are moderate Prof. H. A. Hopper of the New York ly wet, 5 dripping wet, 6 bone dry. Agricultural college at Ithaca. To repeal the prohibition amend “In spite of the fact that men must ment would require the votes of 36 know they are no match for a boll, States. If the attempt is ever made they continue to take unnecessary it w ill be seen that of those 43 “moist' chances." 8tates, half w ill vote against repeal. Very few bulls are kept long enough In service. They must be Mr. Doran, prohibition commission seven years old before their daugh er, finds the prohibition problem based ter’s records will be In sufficient num on the fact that “people are willing to bers to Indicate his true worth. At least pay 310 for 16 cents' worth of sucker half of the causes given for the hasty whisky.” removal of bulls could be prevented "Sucker whisky,” says Mr. Doran, by providing proper equipment for “is put in special bottles, corked with handling them. aged corks burned with the right mark, To get a normal increase In the size labeled with saltwater-stained labels, of herds, service must be dependable. packed In saltwater-stained burlap, When this Is not the case, much time and sold to country clubs as “just off Is lost between lactations, and the the boat.” breeding efficiency of the herd Is low. Every herd sire should have an open Here is comfort. W orry no more yard, strongly fenced, and a sanitary about the world coming to an end stall, according to Professor Hopper. A Canadian scientist says the sun is As It Is both costly and dangerous to about 10,000,000,000 years old and will give mature bulls the necessary exer last at least 10,000,000,000 years cise on the staff, many are trained to longer. Ten thousand million years is work In a tread power. The younger a long time. bulls, when turned out together, will W hile the sun lasts the earth will furnish exercise for each other. last. The human race may be partially Young bulls should be trained to or completely wiped out at intervals, behave on a staff and may be safely compelled to begin all over again, handled thug for a short time. As working its way up from microscopic they reach maturity, they should he oreatures floating in salt water. confined to a well-balanced pen and yard. The use of gates, narrow passages, W e have, by the way, a new ances tor, nothing less than a fish fossil, with and doors controlled by ropes or ca a hinged neck, that lived about 200,000,- bles allows the caretaker to do all the 000 years ago. He was found near the work about a bull without coming In city of Buffalo, N. Y., where he used contact with him. The use of a breed to swim when the northern part of the ing rack, when properly installed, con United States was covered with water. tributes to safety and good results. The keeping of hulls can easily be Now we have hinges all the way down our necks and all the way down made less hazardous. With a safety our spines to the last joint, the os bull pen, all dangers can be entirely coccyx, all we have left ef a tail we eliminated, said Professor Hopper. once carried around. Vicious Animal Is Usually Watched Very Closely. ’oor Time Now to Grow France permitted the Graf Zeppelin to sail over all her West Indian colon U nprom ising Dairy Calf ies, except one place on the Island of This year Is about the poorest tlm« Martinique. tbe world has known to rear an un Britain gave permission to fly over promising calf, warns H. A. Hoppei British Caribbean territory. of Cornell University. Stunted calves That nonsense about giving other are difficult to bring to full sized cows nations permission to use the air and anything short of that will he dis should end. Anybody can use the criminated against by critical buyers ocean, of water, and do what he be says. I f the calf Is well bred and ha» been pleases on It, eight miles out. The other ocean, the air, soon to be more brought to the weaning period success Important, should be similarly regu fully, a relatively small amount of con lated, anybody allowed to use it any sistent attention will finish the job where, one mile or two miles up. In satisfactorily. The cheapest gnlns ar« put on at an early age. That means ternational law should settle that. to feed plenty of hay and grain well In seventeen seconds twenty men up to the heifer's capacity from th« with parachutes jumped from a twin s ta rt Helfers should be fed for growth motored Curtis Condor, a new world rather than to become unduly fat. In record. The Interesting Jumper was Armand addition to legume hay and four of Llsotte, Newsreel photographer. He five pounds of silage, two to three aat on the wing of an airplane, pboto- pounds of a grain mixture should be ' graphing the Jumpers; then he jumped* fed dally. The following grain mix- pulled the string of his parachute and. ture Is satisfactory for growing heif sailing comfortably downward, con ers: 300 pounds of com and barley, tlnued taking pictures of the jumpers. 800 pounds of oats, 300 pounds of Henry Bushmeyer, last to jump, bran, and 100 pounds of oil meal passed the others by dropping several thousand feet before pulling the string. An old donkey that worked in Colo rado mines so long that few could re member when he started, la dead at last. He was worked until he couldn't work any more, or even eat- Then they shot him. Now he ia to be "honored” with a memorial, built of ore samples from all the mines In which he worked. A touching picture, it w ill be appre ciated by many old two-legged work ers, Including white collar men, super annuated bank clerks and others. They are leas fortunate than tbe old mine burro. Nobody builds a monu ment to them and nobody shoota them when they can no longer earn a liv ing. They are turned adrift. Nature, encouraged, works wonders. • In 1802 the United States estab lished a herd of 1,300 reindeer ln Alas ka. They have grown to more than 300,000 head. The Canadians are establishing a herd in their vast northern territory. One patch of 15,000 square miles east of the Mackenzie river delta w ill sup- ply grazing for 350,000 reindeer and provide food for natives, suffering be cause of game destruction. bridesmaid this season, fancy Is given tree range to choose “the one you love tsat,* tuning your selection, of course, to the wedding scene from a pictorial viewpoint There are, however, certain fabric trends which It is well to keep in mind, before making a final decision in regard to media for the gowns- beantlful which tbe fa ir attendants of the bride will wear. An outstanding choice, this season, i t lace, another la O ften a best man <6* 1*3«. Waatarn N aw apaoar U nlox-i “It ain 't th* tram th a t block the trail. It ain't tha ash or pin« F or if you fa ll or if you fa il. It w as so m s p esk y vine T hat tripped you up, th a t threw you down. T hat ca u g h t you u n aw ares; Tha b ig th in g s you can w alk around— B ut w atch the w a y for s n a r e s ” —never a groom T H IS A N D T H A T Place tillces of pineapple around th» bam when baking and baste with th« liquor from the pan Serve the ham garnished with the nicely browned pineapple slices. Horseradish is much better if grated and used within a week or two, as It lose* it* flavor and pungency by standing, even if well sealed. Add a little vinegar, sugar and salt to the grated root and cover tightl>. Never throw away even a small bit e f cheese. Grate it, add to any cream soup, creamed potatoes, omelet or eecalloped dish. While the rhubarb is fresh and ten der prepare some: Rhubarb Conserve.— Combine four cupfuls of rhubarb cut fine, four cup fuls of sugar, two oranges, juice and rind, two lemons. Juice and grated rind, one-fourth of a teaspoonful of salt. Heat the mixture until the sugar Is dissolved then boil rapidly and not too long to destroy the color and flavor. Add one cupful of blanched almonds shredded and pour Into jelly glasses. Let the mixture cool a little before putting In the glasses as the nuts will otherwise come to the top. Fowl an Casserol*.—Cut the fowl Into servlng-slzed pieces. Dust with pepper and salt and dredge with flour. Brown delicately In a small quantity Typical Bridesmaids' of fat. As each piece is cooked re move to the casserole. Rinse out the fat In the frying pan and add to the casserole. Cover and cook In a slow organdie and If we may venture to Jacket costumes which “everybody’s oven for three or four hours, or until suggest a third It is printed cotton net. wearing” these days—pique In brown tender. Just before serving remove Not that taffeta, silk crepe or satin, black, or nuvy, shantung in dark-suit the fowl and add to the juices one chiffon, tulle, moire and a continued colorings, allover embroidered effects , cupful of milk which hns been blended list of lovely weaves have become on linen or pique and in printed de , ^ t h one and one-half tablespoonfuls obsolete. No, Indeed I But notwith sign, shantung patterned In vivid ®our* Cook for ten minutes, re- standing the lore of these materials, motifs, embroidered crepe, also silk place fowl and serve from casserole. many stylists are turning to organdie, embroidered pique and legions of Chicken Loaf.— Thia la very nice to net and lace as being “different” from printed crepes. serve sliced as cold meat, also good the usual choices. Designers are In a mood to “make for picnic baskets and sandwich fill Now that the entire fashion world tt snappy” when It comes to color for ing: Is In tbe throes of an accute lace- these now-so-chlc jacket costume* Take two cupfuls of chopped cooked consdousness It followa In natural They emphasize color In two ways, ' chicken. Moisten one cupful of breud ! «equence that many of the mnlds at either through the sprightllnesa oi the : crumbs with one-half cupful of milk, tending June brides will be lace-dad. print Itself or by adding accessories one-half cupful of mashed cooked Thus It Is that lace fine as cobweb and which splash color In “spots” from peas, salt, paprika, onion and green patterned with Intriguing all over head to foot A Jacket and skirl of pepper fried in a little butter, adding florals, reflecting also every lovely brown linen, per example, with a two beaten eggs at the last. Place In tone and tint. Is, at this time, provid blouse of orange hundkerchlef linen. ' a greased baking dish and bake one ing a new theme for tbe creator ot a hut also in tones of orunge. adding how’ ln 8 moderate oven or until Ann wedding party frocks. a pocketbook and Scarf of orange, egg and brown. Turn out on a platter if The charm of lace Is accented in the shell and brown print fabric, ia Sure served hot and garnish with sliced beguiling gown pictured above to left. to present a most striking color study. tomato. The long single streamer of self-tore Then again the message of color Is Turnip or Carrot Custard.—Take one offers endless possibilities in the way carried through the print of tbe fabric cupful of grated raw carrot or turnip, of graceful gesture as the cortege In a manner ns convincing as the pic- mashed and cooked. Beat two eggs, keeps step to the joyous strains of lure herewith reveal* In this In add the vegetable and one pint of the wedding mnreh. Then too, the stance every item from dress to hat, milk, one-half teaspoonful of salt, two several gowns, being in orchid, bine, blouse and scarf Is highly colorful. tabtespoonfuls of melted butter and a rose, perhaps also maize and pale As to Just how colorful one’s cos few drops of tabasco. Mix well and green, play a moat effective color tume I * depends largely upon th« hake In a dish aet Into hot water. When tha custard is set in the center -serve at once. DESSERT, F I8 H , MEAT SAUCES No Trouble From Bloat P asturing Sweet Clover In pasturing sweet clover then- should be no trouble from bloat If cows are well filled on dry liny before turning out the first time. Then keep them on sweet clover, rain or shine. I f by any chance the dairy cows he come very hungry before turning out they should again he filled on dry hay. A straw stack In a sweet clover pasture is a good Insurance against bloat. I f cows do not care for grain due to being too xvdll filled on pasture their grazing time should be restricted Rotation of pastures to keep the growth down, but not to kill out. adds to the protein content of the pastnre and to the good the dairy cow can receive from a given piece of ground ’ Feeding Cows Grain In feeding grain to cows on abun dant pastnre the grain mixture can be made up of relatively amall amounts of hlgh-proteln concentrates Tbe following grain mlxtnrea have proved satisfactory: Mlxtnre No. 1— 100 pounds cornmeal, 100 pounds wheat bran, and 25 ponads cottonseed meal. Mixture No. 2— 400 pounds Cornmeal, 100 pounds cotton seed meal, 100 pounds ground oats, and 10n A Gold Star mother, aged 02 years, pounds wheat bran. Mixture No. 3— starts for Europe to visit the grave of 100 pounds wheat bran. 100 pounds Jackal Cea tasaa her step-son, disdaining the offer of a ground oats, and 50 pounds cornmeal. nurse, perhaps because she comes from «ynipltooy. Tha diaphanous l>euuly ul California, where you don’t grow old. tha ensemble Is scrented by draped She told the young officer who wel C raving fo r Salt , 1 wlde-brim capelines of tninsimrenr comed her to New York to show her The craving of dairy rattle for com h air braid, tha trimming of these the whole city before she went on the mon salt la based upon a real need of chapeaux inning in to the general ship. He did. the body. The dairy cow uses aalt In CUtor scheme. Designers are all enthusiastl< In re proportion to the feed consumed; In te see her step-sou's grave, to see other word*, the high producer will gard to organdie this season. e*i>«- The need more than the low producer. The cially for bridesmaid wear. If those French vintages are most common plan of supplying salt la quaint gown In the ph-tui* te the an they any.” to keep It before tbe animals at all i rigb* baa hand tailored dusters of statement shout the French times. In tbe form of ordinary stock flowers painted on the organdie, the win ho offensive te oar aath 1 •alt. Other dairymen prefer to mix piping about tbe scallop being vartwue tt with the grain, nanally at the rate . ly keyed to tha general color o rb s ** la o f filmy lace and taken • f one pound par M 0 pounds of ~nflc i l la aoppiemenied with | 1 silhouette of bonffant skirt and shoit- waisted fitted bodice. Jacket Costumes Popular. The jacket costume bat become a staple so far as the wurdrobe of the fashionable woman is concerned. The Interesting feature about these practical wearable ensembles Is the materials of which they are made The fact that most of tbe newer weaves are washable is almost unbe lievable, considering the handsomeness of their appearance. Here’s some of the stunning weaves which go to make np the swanky •THE • KITCHEN CABINET « prim bouquet and a A delicious sauce to serve on a cot tage pudding or any steamed cake Is: B ut ts rs c o tc h •sues. — To tine cupful of boiling w a t e r ad d o n e cupful of brown sugar, two table- spoonfuls of flour, a dash of cfnna- •n o n , a n d o n e - fourth teaspoonful of salt thoroughly mixed. Cook until the flour hns lost ft* raw taste and the mlxtnre thick ena, stirring to prevent lumping. Bent in two tahlcapoonfula of butter and remove from the heat, adding one-hnlf teaspoonful of vanilla or coffee ex tract. This It good served hot on Ice crentn, custards or baked paddings. Hard 8auc*.—Cream together one fourth of a cupful of butter and three fourth* cupful of powdered sugar, add one-half teaspoonful of vanllfa and one-eighth teaspoonful of grated nut meg. Long beating makes a creamy, hard sauce. Add the sugar slowly. For variety substitute brown sugar and flavor with maple or grated ieinon or orange rind. Horseradish Sauce.— T ill* Is good with fish or cold meat and well liked with beefsteak. Best one-half cupful o f . cream nntll thick, odd one-hnlf teaspoonful of salt, one teuapnonful of sugar, three or four tablespoonfuis of fresh grated horseradish and a ten- spoonful of vinegar. Good for a sauce over cooked beets. in Calarfal Print. Spanish Sauce.— Add two table- print ol which It Is fashioned. Fot spoonfule of chopped onion to two Instance, Some of tbe smartest town tablespoon fu ll of butter and cook un Add one suits for summer are made of dark til tender and yellow. washable printed fabrics which «pace chopped green pep;»er, one-half cupful llltla figures In gaj lines over navy of celery, two teuspoonfuls of minced retL him k. brown, or perhaps dark parsley, one hey leaf, two cupfuls of tomato, one tablespoonful of flour and green backgrounds. ■alt and pep;ier to taste. Blend the With these clever Jackets nnd «klris door with a little butter before add of handsome prim, the Monee Is ptay Ing to the eanre. Cook for half an In* a moo» sensational role. I tot ted sales, hnmikerdilef linen frtqn* dr hour, remove the hay leaf, cook ten minute* longer, adding the flour and «ole. organdie, embroidered imitate ar* hut a few ot the weaves of whirl* hatter at this lime. Now add four tabtespoonfuls of minced hem and «mart hlntwes (especialI) Inch tear at are marie JULIA R u TTtiM I.K Y tin:** • "1T TOMEN like their men strong * ’ — and their men’s pipes mild! D o n ’t let your pipe stand between you and domestic hap piness. T o tame that wild briar of yours, try Sir W alter’s favorite smoking tobacco. I t ’s satisfying, and a lot milder. A n d it' s wrapped in heavy gold foil to beep it fresh right dow n to the last fragrant pipeful. TUNS IN SO “Tht Kileish l o w ” a m , Friday. 10:00 to 11:00 p. m. (Naw Yoik TlmaX o va tha WBAF coa*-«o-coaK ectweik ofN . B. G SlRV<ER R aleigh S m o k in g T o b a c c o Watch Your Stop On what basis the calculation In made Is not stated, but some fellow with a sharp pencil has worked It out that the accident list of last year cost this country 3900,000,000. Almost one-third of this was repre sented In automobile casualties. N ew TH E IDEAL F A M ILY LAXATIVE MEBICIME CABINET SIZE Effective in Milder Doses Insist on the Genuine Feen-a-mint FOR C O N S T IP A T IO N Deer That “Barha” ~ The mnntjac, a species of deer found In India, Is known as tbe "barking” deer, as Its call of alarm I* like tbe bark of a fox. Paradoxical The Insects are more reaaonanle than man because they do not rea son.—Clarence Darrow. HEADACHE? W h y suffer when relief fa prompt and harmless! MWiont of people h a v e _____ _ is£ JLS3X fcns.’i s: ttM pein ee quiddy. And that it b as heradee* Genuine Bams Aspirin M W henna the heart. Leek for the Bayw Cross stamped on every tablet. BAYER A S P IR IN