The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, October 16, 1930, Page 3, Image 3

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    Lamb Travels To Exposition By Air
1
Thousands Expected
at Washington's Tomb
Washington,
D.
G —A
constant
stream o t thousands o f satomoblle
tourists Is expected to visit Washing­
ton In 1932 under plans being devel­
oped by the Oaorge Washington bicen­
tennial commission.
Over the eight-month period between
the anniversary o f Washington’s 200th
birthday on February 22. 1832, until
Thanksgiving day th a t year, the com­
mission visualises a continuous pro­
cession of tourists here. Moat o f them
are expected also to visit Washing­
ton’s tomb a t Mount Vernon.
Automobile caravans o f tourists are
being organised In each state for
forty-eight separate pilgrimages to the
city to which Washington gave his
name. Many national conventions are
expected to be held here also.
O. M. Plum m er and grand-daughter Doris-Ann B arn et; Chauncey
Hubbard and Chauneey Jr. greet H ampshire Cwe (donated to Boy and
G irl Club Exhibitors by Flem ing and Hubbard, Sunnyside, W ash.) on
He arriv al In Dick Rankin's plane a t 192» Pacific International.
Approxim ately one thousand head
o f outstanding breeding sheep to
A m erica w ill be exhibited at 20th
Annual Pacific International Live-
stock Exposition. Portland. Oregon.
Oct. 25 - Nov. 1. T he Sheep Dlvi-
sion la one o f the stronger depart-
m e a t, o f the Exposition, offering
almost »10,000 In premiums.
_ ... -
_
™ th »he « » leta n c e o f the U . S.
D e p t o f Agriculture and Pacific
C o op erative W ool Growers Asso-
elation a W ool and Mohair Show
w tll be staged exhibiting fleeces of
a ll b reed, shown In the Sheep
—BOW-
Eleven other complete shows
combine, under the 11-acre roof, to
m ake tbe 1930 Exposition the great-
• a t of alt Pacific Internationals—
Pure-Bred Livestock Show; F at
Stock Show; M anufacturers’ and
Land Products Shows; Industrial
Exposition (covering 2 acres); Fox
Show; P oultry and Rabbit Show
,B th ® B«w T - B- W ilcox, Jr., H a ll;
Boy* ’ and 01rlB' c,Bb W o rk Ejthib>
l t a : ,„ “Tru th -ln -M eaU ”
E xh ibits;
H ° " e 8h ° ’ ; W l,d
£ ‘ fe E * h lb it, ^7 Oregon Fish and
Game Commission; and a complete
I)a lry show featurlng milk> crealn,
tce-cream. butter and chssae o f aU
klnds.
PremInm8 ottered tota,
jig o 000
The Paclflc i nternatlM ua H o r.a
Show lg the Exposltlcn.s great en.
tertainm ent, providing seven even-
ing and three afternoon programs
and 23S.OOO tn cash prises,
A ll leading transportation tinea
o ffer reduced round-trip tares tn
the Exposition.
Three Governors Attend Exposition
Seek Law Requiring
Men to Wear Hat»
Budapest.—This city is in an up
roar over whether hats shall he worn
by men. Last w inter’s fad of going
about without headgear baa com­
pletely ruined the Hungarian hnt bust
nets.
Hat-m akers have promised a
taw that will make the wearing of a
hat obligatory. Budapest dtlxens re­
to rt th a t I f such a law is passed they
w ill wear th eir old hats.
He Flies Distance
of 675,000 Miles
Paris.—T h e French aviator,
Charles Corsln, commercial pilot
for tbe A ir Union, has rounded
out the equivalent of his twenty-
eighth trip around tbe world.
He has had the unusual rec­
ord of flying 8.012 hours, a total
distance of 875.000 miles, and
has carried 10,500 passengers,
all without tha slightest acci­
dent.
His record Is believed
unlqpe in the history o f avia­
tion.
One of the features of the aotfc son of Oregon a n d . hronsa tablet
visiting members from all p a r t, of
the country.
Last year the gover-
n o rt of Oregon, W ashington and
Idaho w are honor guests a t the
noted by J. a
Penney to be used
Include H e t s In-
^ ow'
tor Boys and Girls Club Work and 5 5 ^
n to ^ A r tc X iX V e *
toT tht
r e v is e d
^
Te^ . mOTt gn„dCT
c harce°o f H C
n ^ rn n
charge of H . C. Seymour, Oregon
T h e first step tow ard success
to advertising is the choses
o f th e proper m ed iu m . I f
yo u decide u p o n sp ecial
folders o r circular fo u r s ,
le t us a id yo u in th e choice
o f paper, in k and type.
T h e result w ill be a finished
p rod uct th a t w ill a t tr a c t
attention a n d b e read b y
yo u r prospects.
SHERLOCK
X
i-ERATURE
• Ar
Italian inventor has developed
•
•-
»1
'<1
cooling furnace for domestic
: he same apparatus which keeps
use warm in W inter w ill draw
at from the air in Summer
•
cep it cool.
mists have known for eighty
j
that this could be done, but the
«
as made it impractible. Now
J
tor E. Guarini, of Milan, claims
»
s found a practical method of
y
g such a refrigerator-heater.
use of such a means of artifi-
fci
«ding requires all windows to
jb
'ghtly closed. Outside of the
[United States, however, few people
(ever open their windows; and it
(should not- be difficult to provide fo r
artificial ventilation to take the place
je-f direct fresh air from outside.
M O U N T A IN S
•The highest peak east Of the Miss­
D O N ’T
G U ESS!
B rin g y u u r F o r d her«
issippi isn't as high as had been
thought. The United States Geologi­
cal Survey has made a new survey o f
•Mount Mitchell, In North Carolina,
'and finds that it is 6,684 feet above
leea level, o r 24 feet lower than
dormer figures.
T O nly a few mountains In the East
¡approximate a mile in heigh t Cling-
The death of S ir Arthur Conan
Doyle at 71 removes from the earth­
ly scene the creator ol one of the en­
during characters in fiction and the
father of a new school of story w rit-
Educated as a physician, Conan
Doyle early, turned to literature, and
while he wrote several historical
novels o f great m e rit his immense
success was with his stories of the
super-detective.
Sherlock
H o lm e s.
Literally millions of copies of his
books about Sherlock Holmes have
been sold, and the name Is familiar
wherever English is spoken.
N o real detective ever did things
the way Sherlock Holmes did. but
that makes no difference.
W hat
readers o f detective stories want to
not fact but illusion.
W ASHING TO N
In 1932 tbe United States o f Am er­
ica w ill celebrate the 200th birthday
o f George Washington. H a was born
on February 11, 1732, and the 11th
was the day which was celebrated aa
his birthday for many years. But tha
change in the calendar hi 1754, by
which 11 days were dropped out o t
the month o f September in that year,
made this anniversary, by aa exact
calculation, fall on the 22nd.
lot Irb xli Congress has appropriated'
*4.5 a.'.-jlhl, hi ill last from February
to ¡V.a.'trsgtvmg. T b s President tai ■
c li a i i i s a n o f the Washington llice.t-
ivn.iidi Comniisnon, and each S.atg
i- to appoint i similar comni’SSKpi.
laoal committees will be fanned l®'
« to it that every child and every!
itizea lias an opportunity to take
part in some form of local celebra­
tion.
5
I hope that the picture ol Wash­
ington as something between ■ taint
and a dems-god, so long pc
-a tad
in the name of patriotism,
rto
placed in the public mind b;.
.ns-
pression of turn as s very l. nnaa
to rt o f person, but 1 am afraid not.
Ot
SMITHSONIAN
M ore than 100 years ago J anted
Smithson, s wealthy Englishn
who
was tbs illegitimate ton of a
tisb
nobleman, left his entire for
to
the United States of America t n ind
“an institution for the incre.,
rnd
diffusion o f knowledge amon
n*
Congress just before adjt»..
nt
this year appropriated t^5(X
t®
edd to previous appropriations i > . the
enlargement o f the Smithsonian Insti­
tution and its National Museum.
Smithson’s bequest and the purpose
to which it has been put have bees
worth uncountable usilUom to Am er­
ica.
Research In pure science con­
ducted by the men in charge of the
Institution has done more towar.l the
development of our national resour-
oea than any other ana cause, to those
fam iliar w ith the matter my. I t isj
the center to which everybody who J
wants to know anything about A m er-.
¡can soils, rocks, fishes, plants, trees,!
insects o r animals goes for precise in—’
formation.
I t is also the greatest)
Source o f Information on applied s d -l
enca in the form o f invention.
I / , fotf and maybe have
no place In o a r service.
Yon want to know what’a
wrong with your ear, what
r e p a ir s a n d p a r ts a re
needed and how ranch
they w ill coat. H ere are
mechanics who arc spe­
c ia lis ts on th e F o r d !
Genuine Ford parts and
flat-rates. Ask about our
inspection service.
Rohrman Motor
À Charming T rarts parent Velvet Gown
OUR SHOP 1 MODERN
Phons 871
W W O < iii U M U H ■
1^ T H A iA ÏO M K IU T
T i i r a t Jee b i / J ie '^
.Hermiston, Oregon.
PRINTING
RESULTS
The one big thing
wo a n interested in
when you come here
to buy printing in
U Qth d
luncheon held la the new Hall do- 5 i“ trta lExposition; complete Dairy
-Smith-Hughes Vocational activities.
. « m u » nugnes v o c a u o u « a c u v iu e i.
ca n a d v c rtic e
p r o f it a b l y
OUR SERVICE WILL PLEASE
Seated a t speakers* table are late Governor Patterson of Oregon,
Governor Baldridge of Idaho, lata Governor H a rt of W aehlngton; a lto
Rotary President Benfield and A. C. Ruby,, President 1929 Paelfle
: .Y f 'X
Intern atio nal.
? V
'• Y r ’ X
Pacific Intern atio nal Livestock Ex- unveiled.
position, Portland, Oregon, Oct. 15
Exhibited this year tinder the
. Nov. L w m be th e R o tary Lunch- 11-acre roof w ill he seen m illions
eon sponsored annually by the Port- o fd r f to r e w orth, o f America's fin-
tend Club fo r the entertainm ent of
Pure-bred Beef end D a iry Cattle,
YOU
Moslem Must Give Up
One W ife or Business
Budapest—A Moslem who has two
wives In his native Bosnia, but wants
to become a Hungarian citizen be­
cause he has a shop In Budapest,
must decide between his shop and one
of his wives. H e must either give up
his shop and go back to his native
country, because he has overstayed
his tim e lim it, or become a Hungar­
ian etttzen and gtve rop one o f hta
wives; H ta advertisement for a Hun­
garian to take over one of bis wives
has failed.
chell
Mupnt W a shington,-in New
lla m p s b ir/; is (s2HS. Mount R b g c rs j
V irg in ia , S.719 fe e t; M ount Katahdiu,
Maine, 0 ^ 8 feet, o l 12 feet less Ilian
a mile. The highest American
ns is M ount M cK inley, Abisk--
-0.300 fset high, w ith M ount W h it
-ney, California, next, at 14.501 lev,
A ll the highest mountains are sin k­
ing. I n a m illio n years even the
Rockies may he merely hills, and flio
Appalachian range a flat plain.
’
wd
CTeam' lct
® L sU
klnd<,> Wdo1 and M ohair Show
iU < e (I w lth wwbtBao# of v
can weaouM joo
to insure you maxi-
JRttW MSiaIictioi&^ ,
W e know that ii you
Fare and One-Third
for Round Trip to
D®P t ° f Agrrleultare and B m KI o
Cooperative Wool Growers Aaso-
OMAHA
C H IC A G O
D E 8 M O IN E S
S IO U X C IT Y
C O U N C IL B L U F F S
K A N S A 8 C IT Y
8 T . L O U I8
DULUTH
S T. P A U L
M IN N E A P O L IS
M IL W A U K E E
<” ^ 0 0 ; Manufaeturoru’ and Lend
Producta 8 h o w : "T ru th -ln -M e a t.’’
E x h ib it — an educational feature
K o f " ^ du n u r r o m c l M . Uaud ° f lmme“ nrabl8 TaIue to S to w « « .
L l P t o f A lT jcu*tBre ° m c la ,a and retailers and consumers; W ild L ife
o th er State Club leaders— to one of E x h ib it by Oregon Fish end Game
w hhdTtbe t e ^ d t l O T * l s * M ^ d ta Con” Dll” lon: « d world-renowned
Which the Exposition Is engaged.
Horse Show.
On Sunday morning, Oct. 26, a t
Special low round trip fares to
11 o’clock. M em orial Services w ill the Exposition w ill be In effect on
ho hold fo r la te Governor P atter- aU leading transportatioh lines.
D eparture D ate s:
N O V . 1, 8, 15. 22, 24, 2»
D E C . 6, 13, 18, 19. 20
Return lim it Feb. 28. 1801
8topover privileges
BUTTER
TIMB YOU NBBD
T h e B o d y B u ild e r
Groilnra
Invitations
L c tte r h e a d i
Folder» • Card»
S ta te m e n t »
Envelope«
Butter aaaidta growth, it builds and replenishes
the body of the growing child and the adult; it pro­
motes good eyesight in children.
Butter builds strength, a pound of butter contains
a whole day’s fuel for an adult or an active child.
Umatilla County produce* nearly two million
pounds of butter every ye*r—and this is one of the
County’s greatest resources.
wtoh sray print-
equipment
C Our
«■ M us to turn,
g
bg
o u t fir s t q u ality
in t e llig e n t ly a id
p r o u i u p la n n in g
F. C. Woughter, Agent,
Hermiston, Oregon.
. The last word to Paris and the first in N ew Y o rk is velvet. For mom-
•tog, night and noon, negiigers. pajama», Sunday night »upper frock», formal!
and informal evening and afternoon wear, everything ia velvet.
Tha
•sophist¡rated street eniemble, or the smart bolero for the debutante are
3n black and white or rich aatisnn/cMor», but velvet is the favorite ma-
iteriaL The above costume il of Blanc transparent velvet. I t ia one of
¡the most distinctive models of ffw season combining dignity, charm and
¡toegantv. The outstanding featnves arc the delicately shirred white geor-
;gette collar which emphasizes the new draped neck line, and the flaring
¡sleeve with its turned hack cuff. The belt is a knotted cord braid fastened
.with a rhinestone buckle. The collar a also fastened in the back with four
•rhinestone buttons. Hewn ia «< Uwck velvet, shoes of patent leather and
IJflove« black suede
Phone
O u r jo b shop is as near to you
as y o u r telephone. Phone us to
CHICKENS W ANTED
Hermiston Creamery
SWIFT & COMPANY
« Ä-BA KKfcR, AGENT
call and w e w ill be rig h t o n the
jo b to get th e jo b you have (o r us
Read your local paper.