The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, January 26, 1933, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON
THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1933
5
UMATILLA NEWS ITEMS
$
i
Rev. W. O. Miller spent the week
end in Portland attending to busi­
ness.
Minimum Charge 15c
'
Mr. and Mrs. George Butterwood
motored to Pendleton Monday.
or
M. E. Short of Goldendale, Wn.,
1 Cent a Word
visited at the home of his niece,
Mrs. A. E. McFarland.
Mrs. Duff Knight spent the week
FOR SALI
end transacting business in Port­
FOR SALE — HARRIS COMBINE, land.
Lloyd Miller is confined to his
16 ft., 27-horse hitch, at a very
home with the flu.
low price of $750. Good Condition,
Those town people who attended
Foor particulars inquire at Herald the basketball game in Hermiston
22-tf. I Saturday evening were:
Office.
Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Thompson and daughter
Agnes, Miss Yvonne Bousquet, Mr.
MISCELLANEOUS
and Mrs. Clinton Harvey, Mrs. Nora
Berwick; Hugh Van Scholack, Tom
FOR SALE OR TRADE — A good Slattery, Maxine McNabb, Donna
battery set radio, combination Vic- Pishop, Louise, Erma and Muriel
trola with records. Victor make. Byrnes, Margaret Brown, Josephine
What have you to trade. Inquire W. Connell Ruth Thompson, Mildred
20-3tp Conlon, Minnie Harvey and the high
T Knapp, Hermiston, Or.
school boys’ and men’s teams.
The men’s town team defeated
FOR RENT-MODERN FURNISHED
the Hermiston town team last Tues­
22-tfc. day on the local floor to a 54-17
house.
H. E. Hanby.
score and met defeat on the Hermis­
10
ACRES
NEAR
PORTLAND, ton floor Saturday evening by a 10
Practically all cleared, on a good point margin. The score was 32-22.
highway; electricity available; run-1
Jess O’Connell is laying off for
ning creek through place; fair house the rest of the week. D. M. Walsh
will take his place as engineer on
to tr: de for good milk cows. For | the switch engine.
particulars write Clarence Brock,
The Umatilla high school basket­
Hood River, Oregoon.
22-2tp ball teams met the Echo teams on
the local floor Friday evening. The
BREEDING TOMS—IF YOU WANT J girls were victorious by a 31-8 score.
them, better get them now. Guy The line-up for Umatilla was:Louise
20-ttc ; Byrnes and Ruth Thompson, for­
Cronk. Hermiston, Or.
wards; Minnie Ellen Harvey, Jump-
STRAYED TO MY PLACE—ONE I Ing center; Mildred Conlon, sub cen­
ter; Josephine* Connell and Margaret
bay mule with chain on leg. Own­ Br<wn, guards. Substitutes were:
er please call for and pay expenses. Alice Cooney, Muriel Byrnes, Beth
Rogers, Stanfield, Oregon.22-p. Cooney, Margaret Powell and Bes­
J
sie Dexter. The boys were defeated
FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR COWS by a one-sided game with the score
Practically new "Thor" washing 34-9. The line-up for U. H. S. play-
ers were: Don Harryman and Mau-
machine and mangle. Write E. B.
rice Caldwell, forwards; Allan Hill,
Johnson, Hermiston, Or.
21-3tp center; Ernest Tipple and Robert
McKenzie, guards. Subs were George
LOST—DISK WHEEL AND 30x5 Harvey, Orlin Lane,
Boyd Hower
tire. J. Dell Christley.
2O-2tp and Ray Bray.
M. E. Short and Mrs. Archie Mc-
FAVE SEVERAL BATTERY OPER-
ated radios will give away. Paul Farland spent the week end visit-
ing friends in Pendleton.
Miller.
22-tfc
The high school boys defeated the
Hermiston Bulldogs at Hermiston
TEAM WORK WANTED.
L. M. Saturday evening in the best and
Binder, on Wm.
Gribbon farm fastest game that the Umatilla play­
east of Umatilla.
22-ltp ers have done this season. The score
was 10-6.
FOUND — ONE KID GLOVE. IN-
21-tfc RESEEDING PRECAUTIONS
quire at Herald office.
OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT—Mod­
ern conveniences. Inquire Herald
office.
Notice to Creditors.
Estate of
Dewitt C. Brownell, Deceased.
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON, Umatilla.
County.
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned has been appointed Ex­
ecutor of the Estate of DeWitt C.
Brownell, deceased, by the County
Court of the State of Oregon, for
Umatilla County, and has qualified.
All persons having claims against
said estate are hereby notified to
present the same, duly verified as
by law required, to the undersigned
at 508 Pacific Building, Portland.
Oregon, within six (6) months from
the date hereof.
Dated and first published, Janua­
ry 5. 1933.
publication,
February 2,
Last
1933.
CYRIL G. BROWNELL,
Executor,
John P. Winter and Normal Kuy-
kendall. Attorneys for said Executor.
(Jan. 5 to Feb. 2)
LISTED BY PROF. HYSLOP.
Care in choice of varieties for
reseeding frozen out wheat in east­
ern Oregon, and
precautions
in
treating seed for smut this spring,
will go far toward preventing seri­
ous loss from low yields or grade
discounts for the corning crop, says
G. R. Hyslop, head of the farm crops
department at Oregon State college,
who has studied the situation with
college representatives and leading
farmers east of the Cascades.
"Turkey wheat that was well es­
tablished and that which was plant­
ed very late and just sprouting seem
to be injured less than much of the
wheat In the intermediate stages,"
says Hyslop. "Wheat on well pre­
pared summer fallow
apparently
suffered less than that on
late
plowed or poorly prepared summer
fallow.”
OREGON STATE
LEGISLATIVE NEWS
Brief Resume of Happenings
of the Week Collected for
Our Readers _
Highlights of Monday In ths Ore­
gon legislature:
Governor in message urges further
control of utilities.
Bill offered cutting salary of gov­
ernor, treasurer, secretary of state
and attorney-general.
Abolishing all county offices and
placing control in county manager
proposed.
Municipal ownership of telephones
planned.
New income tax offered increasing
rates in higher brackets.
Inheritance tax rate increased In
new bill.
Thomas bills tightening jurisdiction
over utilities introduced.
Revision of political party organi­
zation offered.
The highlights of Governor Meier's
message to the state legislature Mon­
day were:
Governor Sends Message
Recommends legislation conferring
on the public utilities commissioner
jurisdiction over public utility stocks,
bonds, obligations, mergers, consol­
idations, purchases and sales of prop­
erty.
“Had our national congress and the
legislatures of the various states en­
acted adequate legislation for the
control and supervision of public
utility corporations exercised finan­
cial crashes could have been averted
and the colossal losses suffered by in­
nocent Investors avoided.
“Since the holding company prob­
lem is national in its scope I respect­
fully recommend that this legisla­
ture memorialize congress for the im­
mediate enactment of appropriate
legislation on the subject.
“I also renew my recommendation
for legislation vesting the public util­
ities commission with power to su­
pervise and control utility stocks,
bonds, obligations, mergers, consol­
idations, purchases and sales of prop­
erties so that citizens holding utility
securities may be protected from fur­
ther spoliation.
Burke Urges Salary Cuts
A bill to cut the governor’s salary
$2000 and reduce the pay of the sec­
retary and state treasurer from $5400
to $4500 and slash $500 from the
$5000 wage of the attorney-general.
Tilt on Inheritance Taxes Asked
Representative Hilton
intrduced
amendments to the present inherit­
ance rates, substantially stiffer than
those existing. Mr. Hilton lowers the
exemption from $10,000 to $7000 and
applies these rates:
Two per cent from $7000 to $10,.
000, 3 per cent from $10,000 to $30,
000, 4 per cent from $30,000 to $50,
000, 6 per cent from $50,000 to $70,.
000 and 25 per cent on all in execra
of $1,500,000. Present rates ars 1 per
cent from $10,000 to $25,000, 1% per
cent from $25,000 to $50,000, 2 per
cent from $50,000 to $100,000, with
a maximum of 10 per cent.
Representative Stockdale introduc­
ed a bill wiping out completely all
county officials, elective and other­
wise, save the county school super­
intendent, and placing dictatorial
control in the hands of a manager.
Selection of similar varietal types
so as to avoid mixtures in the har­
vested crop is particularly important
where a partial stand remains, Hy­
slop points out. Where Hybrid 128
Repeal Teachers’ Pay
needs resowing the same variety
Repeal of the section of the teach­
may be used if seeding can be done ers’ tenure law which sets up $75 as
by the middle of February, but af­ the minimum wage, is sought in a
ter that the comparable spring va­ bill introduced In the house.
Four measures were introduced Into
rieties are Hybrid 143, commonly
called shot hybrid, and Federation, the senate today by Senator Wood­
often called soft Federation.
Fall ward. One provides that an entire
seeded Federation can be planted day shall be devoted to the annual
CLAUDETTE COLBERT HEADS
school election Instead of a half day.
back to Federation in the spring,
Another would authorize school
CAST IN UNDERWORLD STORY. and records show that its spring boards to issue warrants in an amount
yields average well with fall plant- equal to the estimated pending re­
Claudette Colbert in the role of ings.
ceipts. A third would empower school
an amateur sleuth, William Boyd as
With Turkey wheats that have boards and other municipalities to
a gang leader, Lilyan Tashman as
been
injured.
Turkey
may
be exchange real property holdings and
his henchwoman and Melvyn Doug­
planted back till the middle of Feb­ the fourth would authorize the school
las as a gang-cleaning prosecutor
board of the Portland district to fix
ruary, after which Marquis is prob­
the rate of interest on warrants at
are principal figures in "The Wiser
ably the best bet, Hyslop believes. not to exceed the legal rates.
Sex”, playing at the Oasis theatre
This will cause some mixture but it
Sunday and Monday.
Lame Duck Gets O. K
is not seriously discounted at Port­
The story starts with Douglas in land.
The senate placed its “okeh” on the
love with Miss Colbert and intent on
"Where lighter soils were seeded "lame duck” amendment to the fed­
ridding the community of a danger­
eral constitution Monday afternoon
to Federation in the fall. It may pay
mment. There
without argumer:
ous gang. He is so wrapped up in
to reseed with a more drouth resis­
was no opposition to the measure
his work that she refuses to marry
tant variety, such as Early Baart, which came from the committee on
him. Boyd kills a relative of Doug-
Hard Federation or White Federa­ resolutions on a "do pass' report. The
Tash-
las and with the aid of Miss
tion. These are better milling wheats house had ratified the amendment
man makes it look as if Douglas had
than Federation. All are well suit­ last week.
committed the crime.
ed to the thinner soils,” Hyslop re­
When ratified by 36 states the
Thus with the cards
stacked ports.
amendment will abolish the lame
against Douglas, Miss Colbert steps
This is a golden opportunity to duck session of congress and will
in as an amateur detective in an ef­
eliminate smut from fields by being chango the date on which the pres-
fort to save him.
Her cleverness
extra careful with treatment of the Ident and vice president of the United
and sometimes lack of ‘it tn her
spring seeded grain, he adds. Dry States take office from March 4 to
sleuthing form the basis for much
January 20.
copper carbonate is recommended
intrigue and speculation. Before
except in cases of very smutty seed
Calendars to Be Sold
she finally traps her man she gets
when the bluestone treatment fol­
The house adopted a resolution pro­
into some very compromising situa­
lowed by lime water bath to pre­ viding for the sale of copies of house
tions nd there is some table turn-1 vent seed injujre is safest.
bills and calendars. Under the sched­
ing not In her favor but she scores
ule copies of calendars for the ses-
In the last trick in a highly drama­
ELSIE—At a cost of $2.00 a Clat­ aion will be sold for $10. Bills will
tic climax.
sop county homemaker has built an sell at $30 and bills end calendars
The charm of Miss Colbert and extra cupboard and so increased her together will be sold at $40. Single
the capable playing of the entire1 work space 20 inches by 40 inches. | bills and calendara will be sold for
cast make this smart picture ot the The top of the new cupboard. which | 10 cents. Bills and calendars to be
underworld very entertaining.
Is even with other surfaces. Is cov-mailed must be paid for In advance
In addition to this feature there I ered with linoleum.
Another ex- Autc, prenata
Is • comedy-short,
"Spot
on
the
penditure ot TBe put a fresh coat of
paint on the pantry.
Phone Bill Introduced
A bill to give the city of Portland,
as well as other cities In the state,
the opportunity to go Into the tele­
phone business and set up Its own
communication system, was introduc­
ed In the house Monday by Repre­
sentative Lewis of Multnomah coun­
ty.
Jobless Relief Studied
A biil, by Senator Spaulding, au­
thorizes the state to borrow $10,000,-
000, to be loaned to employers for the
payment of wages. These loans would
draw interest at the rate of 5 per cent
and be limited to a period of five
years.
Senator Lee has introduced a bill
providing for a “back-to-the-land”
movement. This bill provides that
all lands reclaimed by the state fore­
closures shall bo made available to
the unemployed.
Resolutions discussed at the meet­
ing provide for the appointment of a
new joint unemployment committee
of the two houses and that all state
armories and Camp Clackamas shall
be opened for the shelter and com­
fort of those who are in distress be­
cause of financial conditions. The lat­
ter resolution was introduced by Sen­
ator Spaulding.
Richard Deich, Multnomah, intro­
duced a bill, which specifies that in­
cumbents of party organization offices
shall not hold elective or appointive
positions under federal, state or coun­
ty government.
A new measure, introduced by Judd
of Clatsop, provides that when a mu­
nicipality defaults in tho payment of
Its obligations its governing body may
create the position of ''municipal ad-
ministrator,” who would bo no more
nor less than a receiver to liquidate
the affairs of tho municipality.
The senate approved tho following
appointments: F. I. Canister of Al­
bany. member of the state board of
higher education; Dr. J. H. Rosen-
berg, Prineville, reappointed; Dr. H.
H. Foskett, Portland, reappointed.
and Dr. Robert Benson, Portland, to
succeed Dr. G. E. Houck, all on the
state board of health.
Second Message from Governor
Governor Meier’s second message
was received Tuesday afternoon rec­
ommending the consolidation of tho
World War veterans’ state aid com­
mission and the state land board.
Representatives Clarke and Nichols
of Douglas introduced a bill compel­
ling persons being admitted to county
homes and institutions who own real
property to turn the property over to
the county.
Regulation of salaries of all judi
cial officers will bo under the regu
lation of the legislature, if a resolu­
tion introduced by Senator Dickson
is adopted by both tho senato and
house and later approved by the vot
ers.
Representative Lonergan, Multno-
mah, introduced a bill as a remedy
tor evils which have grown up in the
use of tho recall feature of the Ore­
gon political system. Tho object of
the bill is to strip the cloak of secrecy
from recalls.
To facilitate the presentation of
proposed legislation to members of
the legislature, Representative Deich
of Multnomah conty has proposed In
a bill introduced in tho house Tues­
day that an interim legislation com­
mittee be set up.
The commercial fishing season in
Tillamook bay and its tributaries
would be extended two months by
Representativo
Winslow of Tilla­
mook.
Investigate Telephone Company
Calling attention to tho “mushroom
growth of the telephone monopoly”
during the past 20 years and the suc­
cess with which the monopoly has
evaded every effort at an honest in­
vestigation of its affairs. Governor
Meier Wednesday afternoon In a mes-
sage to tho legislature urged the en­
actment of measures memoralising
congress to confer upon tho interstate
commerce commission authority to
investigate and regulate Interstate
telephone ratea aid services and the
holding company and monopolistic
features of tho American Telephone
& Telegraph company.
The house Wednesday passed a bill
by Representative Clarke of Douglas
which abolishes the fund for educa-
tlonal purposes for soldiers, sailors
and marines. The fund, be explained,
has not been used, and the balança
would revert to the general fund.
At Clarke’s request , another bill
abolishing tho soldiers’ and Bailors’
commission, a body set up in 1920,
was withdrawn.
The house Wednesday received
from the stato board of control a res­
olution asking that investigation of
recent charges of Treasurer Holman
against William Einzig, state purchas­
ing agent and secretary of the board.
Senators Burk^t Williamson and
measure
McFadden introduced
abolishing the office of the state bud­
get director, as it was created by the
legislature of 192: and restores tho
duties of that department to the state
board of control.
Designed to put a stop to so-called
‘gin marriages,” a bill Introduced in-
to the senate would require that a
period of three days elapse between
is made for a
the time
the actual la­
mar ia i 1 en
■uance of the 1
cm as It oper
The grand
ates in Ore
stitutíonal ame
resolution
etor Cora,
Introduced Tuesday by Sen-
OREGON STATE NEWS
ITEMS OF INTEREST
Brief Resume of Happenings
of the Week Collected for
Our Readers
THE MARKETS
Seattle
Wheat — Soft white and western
white, 43c; hard winter, western red
and northern spring, 44c; bluestem,
53c.
Butterfat—17c.
Eggs—Ranch, 26@28c.
Hogs—Good to choice, $3.60 @ 3.80.
Cattle—Choice steers, $4.5005.00.
Sheep—Spring lambs, $5.00 @5.25.
Spokane
Cattle—Steers, good, $4.25 @ 4.75.
Hogs—Good to choice, $3.25 @3.50.
Lambs—Medium to good, $4.75 @
Pori la nd
Wheat — Big Bend bluestem, hard
wheat, 53c; soft white and western
hard winter, northern
white,
spring and western red. 41c.
Hay—Buying prices f. o. b. Port­
land; Alfalfa. Yakima, $12.50.
Butterfat—14 @ 15c.
Eggs—Ranch, 26@ 28c.
Cattle—Steers, good, $5.00@5.50.
Hogs—Good to choice, $3.25 @4.10.
Lambs—Good to choice, $5.00 @
5.25.
The Port Orford Chamber of Com­
merce, unincorporated, has requested
State Corporation Commissioner Mott
to seek an amendment by the legis­
lature to tho present Incorporation
law that will make impossible a re­
petition of the effort to acquire the
name of an existing organization
through filing articles of incorpora-
tion, as was done In the Port Orford
case last March.
PAGE
TWO VARIETIES PURPLE
RASPBERRIES RELEASED.
It is a regular occurrence for some
new kind or variety of fruit or vege­
table or what not to be called to the
atteution of the public in such man­
ner as to stimulate undue interest.
Of course, there are various reasons
for such promotion.
In view of the fact that purple
raspberries have been receiving some
special mention recently, the follow­
ing information is supplied by the
Umatilla county agent. Dr. George
M. Darrow, in charge of small fruits
investigations for the United States
Department of Agriculture, recent­
ly stated, "The only purple raspber­
ries that wc placed in Oregon last
year were those asked for by county
agents or the growers themselves,
and in those cases purchases of
plants were to be made directly from
Ohio propagators.” Two numbers of
purple raspberries were sent out,”
said Dr. Darrow, "those being No.
231 and No. 161, the latter having
been named the Potomac.”
Dr. Darrow is authority tor the
HERMISTON
I
Friday the 13th was truly a day of
misfortune for 19 goldfish In a pool
at an Albany service station. A king-
fisher devoured them, but while the
bird was diving Russell Knighton
hurriedly obtained a permit to use
firearms within the city limits.
Dr. C. J. Moser of Grants Pass has
been appointed county physician of
Josephine county. He will be p l
$140 per month plus 10 cents per
mile for out-of-town cases and an ad-
ditional $15 or $20 for obstetrical
cases.
.
First. National Bank Bldg. |
Office Phone 733 - Res. Phone 712 1
General Dentistry
X-Ray and Diagnosis
Dank Bidg.
Phone 9-J
Residence Phone 25-J
Sunday and Evenings by
Appointment
DR. LINA STAATS
Naturopathic Physician
Bond Bldg.
Rooms 15-16
Pendleton, Oregon
OPTOMOTRIST
The best glasses at a reasonable
cost - OPTICAL REPAIRING
Over Woolworth's-—Phone 1286
Pendleton. Oregon
HERB GREEN
PENDLETON’S LEADING
JEWELER
HERMISTON MEDICAL
HOSPITAL
(Sawtell’s Location)
Conducted by Registered Nurses
LOIS WOODS, R. N. •
BEATRICE McKENTY, R. N.
All patients may have their
own
attending physicians.
Manicuring, Marcelling Hot Oil
Shampoo, Fingerwaving, Facials
PHONE — Hospital 551
; Hermiston Beauty Shoppe
Realistic Beauty Shop
Finger Wave - 50c and 25c
;
We Specialize in Permanent
l
Waving
Pendleton, Ore.
606 Main St.
TO SELL OR TRADE YOUR
PROPERTY SEE
J. W. CLARKE at
G. F. HODGES AGENCY
Duart Permanent Wave.
Pendleton, Ore.
721 Main St.
Late Appointments by Phone
Phone 141
[Watchmaker - Jeweler
W. J. WARNER
Attorney-at-Law
Hermiston - Oregon
W. M. RAKESTRAW
Pendleton, Ore.
627 Main St.
SUNLITE BAKERY, Inc.
;
H. W. KELLEY
Plumbing & Pipe Fitting
Pump and Gas
Engine Repairing
72 W
Phone
Hermiston Post No. 37
Meets first and third
Thursday. Legion Auxil­
iary meets second and
fourth Thursday.
The Home Of
BUTTERNUT BREAD and
SOCIETY CAKES
I
Secure our Products through
your local grocer
’ 320 Court St,
Pendleton, Ore.
ERNEST GHORMLEY
MEN'S CLOTHING and
LADIES HOSE
301 E. Court St.
Phone 326
Pendleton, Oregon
W. J. CLARKE
HARDWARE
I Legion Hall.
MARKHAM
Beauty Shop
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
PHONE 521
Majestic
Ranges,
Red
Jacket
Pumps, Iron Pipe, Nails, Fencing
211-213 E. Court St.
I Itone 21
Pendleton, Oregon
DR. H. A. NEWTON
Dentist
X-Ray Work
Phone 12
Pendleton, Oregon
PENDLETON
Kelvinator Refrigerators, Radio
service and repairs. Motors.
W. G. FISHER
NEW AND USED FURNITURE
BOUGHT AND SOLD
About 50 per cent of the fall sown
grain In Umatilla county is believed
frozen out by the recent cold weath-
er. Home of the ranchers have start-
ed reseeding operations and others
are preparing to seed.
Office Phone 523
A 1000-pound muzzle loading can­
non which had rested at the bottom
of the Willamette river hero for more
than 70 years is on display following
its accidental recovery by a dredging
crew.
Office Phone 1262 Res. Phone 554
DR. DALE ROTHWELL
W. L. Morgan, D. M. D.
A cash payment for a farm In Mid
die valley In Wallowa county lar
week was reported, when Paul Eart
mess from Nevada purchased 110
acres of the Thomas Scott farm for a
reported $9000 consideration.
Residents and visitors of Gleneden
by
Beach recently were amused
watching whales In the ocean near
shore. Watchers could see the whales
leap above the breakers spouting.
There were 10 or 12 of them in sight.
Î
Alfred W. Christopherson :
Office:
"Spike,” the Astoria dog recently
receiving a bequest of $1000 in the
will of his late master, Louis Wig-
gins, is recovering from a serious ill-
nose that attacked him shortly after
the death of Wiggins, In event of
death, the money is to go to a rel-
atlve of Wiggins In Europe.
Construction of a $100,000 oro re­
ducing plant In the Bohemia mining
district, east of Cottage Grove, v ill
get under way as soon as snow cle irs
out of tho mountains, G. A. Collins,
mining engineer of San Francisco, in­
formed the Eugene Chamber of Com­
merce today.
MEDFORD—Ten Jackson county
communities have enrolled in a one-
act play contest sponsored by the
reaction leaders of the home econo­
mics extension service. More than
I
plays have been obtained from
the state college and distributed to
tue various communities.
PENDLETON
Physician and Surgeon
The bonded indebtedness of Mc­
Minnville, according to the report of
the city treasurer, has been reduced
from $206,736 to $182,591. or a net
reduction of $24,145, covering the gen­
eral operations of the city. Warrant
indebtedness is only for current
amounts and is amply covered by de­
linquent taxes.
Friday the 13th was a luck day for
De-
many Cottage Grove residents,
daring that in these stringent times
each must help the other, Frank Men-
denhall, operator of a jewelry store
there, announced the cancellation of
all accounts due his store, starting
the year with a clean slate. ,
statement that the purple cane rasp­
berries are crosses between the black
and red raspberry. The purple rasp­
berry seems to possess the suscepti­
bility to Verticillium wilt that is
found in tthe black raspberry. In
tests at the Oregon Experiment Sta­
tion, five out of ten plants of the
No. 161 purple raspberry easily ac­
quired the Verticillium
and
seven of ten of the No. 231 took on
the same trouble when they were
exposed to it. Dr. Zeller, Patholo­
gist at Oregon State Agricultural
College, suggests that the purple
raspberry bo tested for Verticillium
wilt before planting under Oregon
conditions, it being his judgment
that the red raspberry is much bet­
ter for our purposes, is already es­
tablished, and is adapted to the Ore­
gon climate.
Business and Professional Cards
An entire orchard on one tree ap-
pears to be the goal ot F. E. Jordan,
route 3, box 40, Grants Pass, Ore.,
who reports successful experiments
in grafting a large number of variet­
ies of fruit, nuts and roses on single
stalks. On one Chinese blight-reci: t-
ing pear tree, five years old, have
been grafted 90 apple, 14 pear and
four quince varieties, he reported.
Since the recent storms many glass
Japanese net floats have been depos­
ited on the beach near Rockaway.
Three extra large balls, each 30 inches
In circumference, were picked up. It
is said to take three years for them
to cross the ocean and most of them
are covered with a sea moss when
found.
THREE
Bowman Hotel Blk.
Phone 198
Pendleton, Ore.
507 Main St.
Res. Phone 461
DR. F. L. INGRAM
Dependable Dentistry
Bond Bldg.
Pendleton, Ore.
ELECTRIC SERVICE COMPANY
Electrical Contracting and
Merchandising
John Vortilla, Prop.
627
Tel. 978
Pendleton, Orc.
Main St
We Specialize in Armstrong
Linoleum, inlayed or printed.
We also specialize In the Hea-
trola Circulator, the stove that
saves you coal.
V. STRORLE
210 E. Court St.
Pendleton, Ore
WE
BRADLEY & SON
Shoe Rebuilder»
We rebuild shoes with machinery
your shoes were made on. The
only factory machines in Umatilla
County. Mail your shoes to us.
We pay the return postage. Bet­
ter shoo repairing for less mon­
ey. Give us a trial.
Bradlev & Son
643 Main St.
Pendleton, Ore.
Specialize in Good Furni­
ture at Lowest Possible
Prices
Free Delivery
to your door.
WHER” QUALITY Ap PRICES MEET
°K
IPME&T
-
PENPLETGN OREGON