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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1933)
THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1983 HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON « — OREGON STATE NEWS ITEMS OF INTEREST HERE IT IS Cut | I , Brief Resume of Happenings of the Week Collected tor Our Readers Butterfat —14 @ 15c. Eggs—Ranch, 15 @ 16c. Cattle- Steers, good, 11.75 @ 5.25. Hogs—Good to choice, $3.50 @ 4.35. Lambs — Good to choice, $5.25 @ 5.65. Spokane • | | Cattle—Steers, good, $4.25 @ 5.00. Hogs—Good to choice, $3.50 @ 4.00 Lambs—Medium to good, $4.75 @ 5.00. 1 First bricks of Rogue River cheese made at Central Point have been in troduced at Medford. The plant has been In operation for a month and has already shipped several tons to California but has refrained from local sale until the cheese is properly aged. The ultimate capacity of the plant will provide for the use of 30,000 to 40,000 pounds of milk daily. get allotments, with the result that tax delinquencies were offset and a reduction of $9500 in the city's war rant debt was made. The city spent $71,634 during the year. Fuel has been supplied to all the needy In immediate territory of To ledo during the winter by the Cream ery Package company of Toledo. This Is in the form of waste wood which cannot be used by the plan: and would otherwise be burned. A large mule, and an automobile The white robin that each spring comes back to Sherwood has made driven by Troy Qualls of Klamath his appearance again this year on I county, met recently on The Dalles- the Walter Dewey farm near Sher I California highway near Williamson wood. This is the third year that river, head-on. The mule was killed the bird has been seen in this vi | and the automobile badly wrecked. cinity. The bird is snowy white, with A protest again! the rerouting of a red breast, and is always found in i : 1 ghway from the north- a flock of other robins. ( i Ì •. of Ashland to a point is a 50 per cent reduction compared with last year. FOR ONE The postoffice at Melrose, Douglas When Ray Toft of Jacksonville county, has been discontinued. It was established 46 years ngo. In ' committed suicide, last October, it was those days it took the mall carrier a reported that he was in financial dif- full day to travel 25 miles from one I ficulties. An inventory of his prop- end of ids route to the other. Today I erty, just filed, shows that he left an the carrier travel 59 miles in about estate valued at $67,259. four hours. Wheat experts of Pendleton be lieve that heavy wheat land in Uma tilla county, frozen out during the winter, will be reseeded 100 per cent, but that much of the light land I will be left unseeded. Word has been received here that Dougan-Hammond co., of Portland, awarded the contract for the con struction of the new Oregon City post office, will start work this month on the new structure. Congressman Samuel A. Kendall of I Pennsylvania, who recently commit Owners of dogs in the city limits ted suicide, was financially interested of Tillamook City have been warned for many years in large timber hold by the police department that the ings on the North Umpqua and East ordinances that prohibits dogs from | Umpqua rivers. running at largo will be rigidly en forced to the letter. Mary Hoffman Vining, an Oregon pioneer of 1853, is dead at her home in Ashland. She was nearly 96 years of age and was the mother of Irving Vining, a member of the state game commission. A decision of the circuit court de termining the minimum or upset price at which f rm land in Umatilla county may be sold under mortgage foreclosure is asked in a suit filed 1 Road work in Clatsop county is be at Pendleton. ing held back pending spring tax Acreage in alfalfa in Lane county is gradually increasing and more will be planted this ye at than in any pre vious year. Sixty-nine soil tests for 22 different farmers were made dur ing February. Keep up with the Home Town News by Having The Hermiston Herald as a weekly Visitor in your home. " PAGE THREE » ■ Non-Producers Save Feed ing the past 11 years the number of some form every day. Now that eggs per hen to pay for her cost of spring is coming and eggs are get feed has ranged from 48 to 72 per ting more plentiful, and cheaper in year, averaging 62. In IU.J, It re price, this can be done without in quired rat eggs per hen annually to pay her feed costs. About ten dozen are creasing costa. Nutrition authori required per bird to pay the entire ties recommend eggs at least three or four times a week for a well cost. On this basis you can easily esti balanced diet. This is because of mate what your own Hock Is doing their value as body-building food, Now is the time to cull the old hens their high vitamin content, and be In the Hubbard section the straw As with the dairy so with the poultry, cause they are an excellent source berry crop will be light this year. The this Is the year to weed out the non of iron in a form very easily utilized long drouth last summer prevented producers mercilessly. Fortunately, in the body. Because of this Iron, the development of fruit spurs, while the ratio between feed and eggs Is the big freeze of some weeks past eggs are good blood builders. Al relatively good, so that If you do cull raised havoc with the plants. Black though eggs are richer in iron than closely and then exercise more than caps were not injured and the dam usual care your poultry business may milk, they contain much less cal age to raspberries and logans was come through fairly well during the cium or lime. For this reason they slight. are in no way a substitute for milk next year.—American Agriculturist. School started last Monday for but should be considered a supple eight children of the forest fire- ment to it. Dishes prepared with blackened Cochran area. In a convert- Sanitation Pays these two protective foods in combi- ed railroad car, a teacher, hired by finnois poultry men who used sani nation assure a highly nutritious, citizens of Wheeler, will teach the tation and otherwise practiced good children of the few families remain- | management got a return of 31 cents as well as palatable result. The ad- ing after the worst fire in the history an hour more for their labor last year dition of cheese to any egg dish of the state laid desolate the region. than flock owners who did not use rives rest nd flavor which adds to e pala ibility, A few recipes Ie- sanitation, according to a summary of Expenditures of the city of Bend their records hy H. II. Alp poultry ex turing esgs, with milk and cheese, during 1932 were $34,000 under bud- tension specialist of the University of ¡re: keon Hot Springs has One hundred and fifty men have i y a group of property begun work in five-hour shifts on wn ra along the precent route. the Pacific highway at Ashland. Twonty-cne per cent of the men are The Yamhill county court has re selected from the Jackson county un duced the tax on dogs. The new rate employed Hot. The remainder are i for males and spayed females is 50 from Coos, Curry and Multnomah conta and for females 75 cents. This counties. SUBSCRIPTION » 1 In the Trout Creek section on the H. L. Friday ranch, an unusual sight to be seen by the traveler on The Dal the MARKETS les-California highway is a small herd of buffalo feeding In the alfalfa field. * Portland These animals were secured recently No wheat quotaitons. by Mr. Friday while in Portland and Hay—Buying prices, f. o. b. Port | brought to their new ranch home by truck. land; Alfalfa, Yakima, $12.50. j No wheat quotations. Butterfat—16c. Eggs— Ranch, 15 @ 16c. | Hogs—Good to choice, $3.60 @ 3.75 Cattle—Choice steers, $4.25 @ 4.75. ' Sheep—Spring lambs, $5.00 @ 5.25. | ONE — ===== Speaking of longevity: Word has Out +***********••• been received by J. I. Hallmark, who ♦ HI-WAYS TO HEALTH ♦ and Cost of has moved back to Cove. Ore., recent By Ada R. Mayne • ly from Lu Grande of the death of a According to the poultry depart • brother at the age of 101 years. Mr. ment of the New York State College • OREGON DAIRY COUNCIL • Hallmark, who is nearly 70. was the of Agriculture, feed Is about one -halt $*$9229**$***% youngest of a family of 12 children, I of the cost of keeping a hen. 90 pounds Delicious Egg Features all of whom were alive until this I being required per year for slightly A wise resolution for any house- death occurred. | better than average production. Dur wife to make is to serve eggs in I SEATTLE REDUCED TO 1 A year and a half after receiving a report of a stolen watch from Tom Halverson, of Klamath Falls, the city police located the watch last week in a second-hand store. The Lane county chapter of the Red Cross will do investigatory and relief work for the county commit tee of the Reconstruction Finance corporation. payments, which are expected to give the county court an idea of what funds may be expected to be real- The Ma yea cedar mill on Middle Elk, in Curry county, is to te moved south of Ophir this week and work will continue on cutting Port Orford cedar for storage battery separators. Pastor Whitesmith of Community Liberal church at Eugene has pro posed to the Lane county court that it allow property owners to work out delinquent taxes on the roads. Stockholders of the Old Union Ditch company, organized 50 years ago in i Yakima county, have celebrated its Josephine Chard, 3, of Demar, died 50th anniversary and approved new at Kelzer Bros, hospital as the re articles of incorporation. sult of falling in a tub of scalding water at her home last Sunday night. George W. Dunn, state senator, Jackson county, has been elected More than 200 men are now em president of the First National bank ployed in county relief work in Mar of Ashland to succeed the late E. V. ion county, it was announced by offi | Carter. cials. Others will be added later. Alfred siakis of Blaine was arrest- 1 ed recently on a charge of unlawful Velma Kizer, teacher at Albany, is possession of deer meat and was sen displaying a fully developed, ripe tenced to 50 days in Jail and fined pineapple, the fruit of a tree that ■ noo. Illinois. He cites this as further evi- dence that the difference between sue cess and failure In poultry raising Is largely one of good management, since sanitation Is always part of good man agement. Flocks handled under the recommended sanitation system paid their owners a return of 70 cents an hour for labor, while nonsanitation farms paid only 45 cents an hour. —Indiana Farmer's Guide. E s and Noodles an Gratin. 4 ta bles, con a butter ? tablespoons flour ’ 14 enn milk 1 teaspoon salt 16 teas, o on w ite pepper 2 cups diced celery 6 hard cooked eggs 12 cup grated cheese 1 package noodles Cook noodles in salted water un til tender. Make white sauce of flour, milk and seasonings. Brown celery In butter. Put noodles, cele- ■y, sliced eg s, and cheese in alter ate lay: ra Into buttered baking ish. Four white sauce ovi r all. prin le > ith grated cheese and aprika. Set id moderate ov n un- l cheese melts and browns light- y. Serves six. Watch Flock’s Condition Fowls should he handled frequently If one Is to know their true condition. They are disturbed least by doing this at night after they have gone to roost. If too fat. reduce the feed ami increase the amount of bran It results are still poor. Increase the n>... nt of animal feed such as meat. Scraps, etc. liens with too much fat are not In good laying condition he cause the fat prevents the egg from passing through the egg duel. It takes some experience In handling to detect the 'pink of condition” In n laying ‘ien but II is a knack that can be easily acquired. Erg Itoll with Cheese Sai e. For Good Hatch The older, and better known essen tials of a good hutch are these: (I) Eggs must be fertile. In the breeding flock there should he one vigorous mule to every eight liens In the heav iest breeds, one to 15 In the Rocks and Reds, and one to 20 In the light breeds. (2) Eggs must be gathered same day ns laid. (3) Eggs must be stored in a temperature between 32 and 68 de grees Fahrenheit. and should be turned daily. (4) Eggs shoulI be selected normal In shape and size. Make you r favorite bakin pow- r 1 iscuit dough adding two table- poons of cheese with shortening, oil out to about 1 inch thi kness nd spread with tthe egg filling: 1 cup milk 3 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour 12 teaspoon salt 4 hard cooked eggs Make a thick white sauce of the flour, milk, salt and butter. Add the < hopped, hard cooked eggs. When •ool, spread on the biscuit dough. Roll the dough Jelly-roll fashion and cut Into half Inch slices. Place slices cut side up in pan and bake in hot oven 15 minutes. Serve with ( heese sauce or melted cheese. Cheeoe Souffle. Poultry Facts 4 eggs 1 % cup milk Chickens need at least four square 1 cup fine dry bread crumbs feet per bird in small houses. • • • 1 tablespoon butter It Is claimed that a hen’s eggs reach % lb. American cheese maximum size during her second year’s % teaspoon salt laying. 1 teaspoon paprika • • • 3 drops Tabasco sauce When wild turkeys appear near a Heat the milk, bread crumbs, and tame Hock they greatly excite the do butter in a double boiler. Shave mesticated birds, and a wild gobbler will allm k a tame one. usunily be the cheese into thin slices, idd it Ing victorious over the barnyard var to the hot mixture, and stir until the cheese has melted. Add this letv. mixtura to the well-beaten egg yolks. Season to taste with papri- I :a and Tabasco. Fold the h t mix- line Into the stiffly beater egg whites containing the salt Pour Into a greased dish, and bal in a very moderate oven (300 1 ) for one hour, or until set in the enter. Serve immediately. rocce............................. You get results from printing done by us | Stitch for Needy Si 1 ape tn she has grown at her home. Wild Horse grange, at Adams. Um- Recall petitions have been filed at atilla county, has passed resolutions Warrenton. Clatsop county, seeking opposing a sales tax and also a 3-mill the recall of G. Clifford Barlow, po tax for state purposes. I lice judge. John Boyd, 60, of Medford was In Wc now have over 1,000 subscribers. The Reedsport Chamber of Com a serious condition in a hospital as merce will issue scrip secured by the result of an explosion In a local large payrolls in the lower Umpqua rooming house. Boyd was attempt valley. The scrip will be In denomin ing to build a fire with the aid of ations of 25 cents. $1 and $2.50. kero ene when the explosion occur Orders for wages are given priority red. right In the redemption of the scrip. The signs of spring have not read Walter P. Fell has been reelected true this year Pussy willows ap- | president of the Eugene water board. peared, grass sprouted, earwigs were The board votad to d continue the seen, incubators b r o u G h t forth str « t I i cervice in the College their young and still spug did not Crest district. come. But now the boys have begun to piay marbles and spring is here. - 1 Photograph, Ruth Aleeader Nicholr Girl Scouts have nimble fingers and willing hearts. They prefer to turn out pretty clothes, when they can get the material, but thousands of them are contributing their services as seamstresses to the needy these hard times.