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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1934)
THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1934 THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON FARM CO OPERATIVE DIVISION JA AA WHEAT PLAN NOW OPEN FOR SIGNERS TILL APRIL 15. MESSAGE TO EVERY MEMBER. CLOSING DATE ON CORN-HOG RE- DUCTION CONTRACTS, MAR. 14. FORD V-8 WANT ADS The Car Without a Price Class To the Members of the Umatilla AND LISTEN— Don’t let them kid you about Yearly dues of the Association are "knees” and other complicated gad- due March 1st of each year, and gets that can only result in trouble there is allowed 60 days thereafter I and expense. Examine a car with ----- type front end and imagine the to make payment. The amount is - this only $1.00 per year, and carries cost of repairing even a small wreck with it a paid-up subscription to —count the extra parts—ask the the Hermiston Herald for one year, salesman how long he will guaran- and the privilege of trading with tee the front tires to last and then the Farm Bureau Co-op, which is a —you’ll know that Ford has accom- plished all knees can do and with separate organization. Please bear this in mind so that the added safety of a front axle for we may have a clean slate of paid- 22 years by using transverse springs. up members by May 1st. Remember the bally-hoo about C. M. JACKSON, Secretary, Umatilla Project Farm Bureau. “Free Wheeling”? —Our competi tors have dropped it.—Probably Production Forms Available. “Knees” will go the same route. Forms for the Emergency Crop Production loan (seed loans) and for the Pendleton Crop Production Loan Association loan applications are now available at the office of Garnet D. Best, assistant county agent's office. Anyone wishing these forms may obtain them from Mr. Best or from the county agent at Pendleton. Project Fann Bureau. Oregon wheat growers who have According to the contents of a not heretofore signed acreage reduc telegram received at the office of tion contracts will have until April Assistant County Agent Best, March 15 to Join with the owners of 82 per 14th, the final closing date for sub nt of the state’s wheat acreage mitting corn-hog contracts in Ore already in the nationwide plan of gon has been set by the Corn-Hog controlled production on the allot Committee for April 3rd, through ment basis with benefit payments, authorization granted by the Corn- cording to. word received by the Hog section. Mr. Best was requested Ore: on State college extension ser- to notify farmers to this effect. vice. This means that no new applica Because of this reopening of the tions for Corn-Hog Reductions can wheat program and the continuing be received by the community com work arising under the general mittees after April 3rd. wheat plan, E. R. Jackman, exten sion crops specialist, has been de UMATILLA PROJECT FARM BU- signated as head of the state col- REAU WILL MEET SATURDAY. le: e group in charge of the educa- onal and organization features of Members of the Umatilla Project the wheat allotment plan. Farm Bureau will meet at the Meth Though Jackman has not received odist church Saturday night, March 11 reports from Washington as to 17th. at which time a discussion on he details of this additional wheat the establishment of a store will be o ram, he has assembled consider- held. Another feature of the pro le information which will serve to gram will be 4-H club achievement p the remaining Oregon growers awards made by H. C. Seymour, to decide whether they want to Join state club leader. the reduction plan. New rulings permit any grower Information Requested. who had applied for a contract be- Certificates of equity issued in fore January 1, but who for some reason did not complete It, to go 1925 numbered from 1 to 83, in- ahead now and carry through the elusive, have been called for re- contract and receive all payments demptlon. Many of the holders of on the 1933 crop as well as those these certificates have moved away, WORMS WILL CHECK to come. and the management would appre HENS’ PRODUCTION Another concession made is to the ciate any assistance any of the read man who raised wheat only in 1932 ers of the Herald can give toward All Fowls Are Susceptible of the base period and thus would locating the parties listed below: in Warm Weather. Cert. Name Last known address have been allowed to raise only a third to a fifth of that acreage un- Hermiston A flock of hens infested with worms der the contract. The new plan is 3 Wm. Ogden __ will not lay nearly so many eggs as a C. T. Saling __ .... Irrigon to let such "one-year men” raise similar flock free from these parasites. that same acreage less the 15 per 5 W. T. Wright ... ..... Irrigon As a rule, worms do not affect chick cent reduction, though their allot- 38 W. A. Knauff . Boardman ens until they are two or three months ments on which benefit payments 55 H. C. Gay ____ Hermiston old, but from then on all fowls are susceptible to them, particularly In would be made will be figured the . Stanfield warm weather. It Is easier to prevent same as previously, by taking the 63 C. C. Cleveland 71 W. H. Copeland . Stanfield chickens becoming Infested with 54 per cent of the average produc- Holdman worms than it is to eradicate them tion over the base period. They 72 D. C. Beckman 73 C. C. Barker ... .... Irrigon later. would get all payments. The first and most important step Hermiston Others who made no application 83 E. C. Lyle In the prevention of worms, notes a at all may still join but will not be it the certificates are endorsed writer In the Montreal Herald, Is to eligible for the payment of 20 cents and sent In to the office, checks in practice strict sanitation in the poul per bushel already made, but they payment thereof will be mailed out try houses as well as in the poultry will receive the remainder of the promptly. yards. Poultry yards should be spread at least twice a year with lime, then 1933 payments amounting to some spaded or plowed. The poultry houses thing less than 8 cents a bushel, Stanfield Grange News. should be cleaned thoroughly at least and whatever payments are made on With Mrs. J. F. Rueber acting as once a week. Not only should drop the 1934 and 1935 crops. In all other respects the new program chairman, a most interest pings boards and roosts be scraped, but they should also be disinfected signers will be on the same footing ing program was presented at the with a good disinfectant Feeders last Grange meeting. The "Romance as those who joined at first, and and fountains should be washed and will not receive any advantages or of Piff-Paff Lard” was ably related disinfected at the same time. If pos by a cast of Hermiston High girls, sible, young stock should be on ground disadvantages through the delay. If a new applicant has already Anna Rae Martin, Edith Clarke and on which chickens have not been for The Cub two years. planted more than 85 per cent of Helen Jendrzejewski. It is not enough, however, to prac his acreage he will have to reduce Wranglers pleased with several mu- to that figure, either through plow steal selections. The members of tice sanitation on your poultry plant ing or disking the excess acreage or the orchestra are Edna Ott, violin; and then just take It for granted that your birds are not afflicted with using it for pasture or hay under Guy Jeppe, accordion; and Jim Cou worms. If the laying flock Is produc Mrs. Emma Penney the same restrictions as present con ture, guitar. ing poorly, if the birds look tired, and Doris Helder gave readings. tract holders. have sharp breast bones and pale Members are asked to please urge combs, or if the young stock looks un All new applications will be pub lished in the newspapers the same candidates to be present at the next thrifty and Is thin, with lifeless plum as formerly, and contracts will go regular meeting, Saturday, March age, It Is quite likely they have worms. to the board of review. The plan is 17, when Cold Springs Grange will The only thing to do then is to cut not to put on any new campaign as exemplify the 3rd and 4th degrees. open one or two of the worst looking birds and perform a post-mortem op such, but it is hoped to inform all eration, slitting the intestines their non-slgners of their new opportu- FOREIGN BUG WITH BAD entire length. If you find worms, you nity and then let them go to their can be pretty sure that the rest of, RECORD SOUGHT IN OREGON. county wheat production control the flock is also infested. committee and make application of (O.S.C. Barometer) they are interested. Entomologists at the Oregon Ag Hopper Feeding of Both ricultural experiment station are Grain and Mash Is O. K’d Cooperation Can Do It. looking for Bruchus brachialis and Hopper feeding of both grain and In a recent address before the hoping they will not find him. He mash the year round seems to be In Virginia State Dairymen’s Associa- is a small, dark-complexioned for- creasing. Several experiment stations tion, Charles H. Baldwin, Commis- signer with an even darker record, have found It to be satisfactory, par sioner of Agriculture and Markets Officials let him slip past them in- ticularly so for the special laying of that state, said: "All that we to New Jersey in the summer of breeds. It seems to be doubtful hope to accomplish through milk 1931. He has since spread his ac- whether It works as well for the meat control boards and milk marketing tivltles over four other states and type of birds. Many poultry men are agreements that provide federal was recently thought to be In Ore- hopper feeding corn and oats, but not support, could be secured through gon, although a search has so far wheat, for the reason that when wheat Is fed with corn and oats, the birds the cooperative efforts of the dairy- failed to locate him. generally consume a greater percent men. . . . Bruchus brachialis has six legs age of wheat than of the other grains. “There are many helps, especially and two feelers and looks quite a In that event, because wheat brings in this disturbed time, that we must bit like many other beetles. The en the highest price of common grains, have from our state and federal gov tomologist, when he does not want the tendency would be to Increase the ernments, that we would not expect to be too technical, designates him feed cost. To obviate this difficulty, wheat Is as the hairy-vetch bruchld. He is or need under normal conditions. "The fact remains, however, that about an eighth of an inch long, not hopper fed ; from four to six much of this help would not be greyish black, and his exclusive diet pounds of this grain is fed daily In the litter, per hundred birds. Hopper needed if dairymen would cooperate of vetch seeds seems to have made feeding of grain, except wheat. Is and as one, unite to work for the him rather stout. His home for ma liked for several reasons. It simplifies ny years has been in southern and the feeding problem and It is more desired goal.” Secretary of Agriculture Wallace central Europe and part of Asia Mi sanitary. Reducing labor cost Is some has often observed that one of the nor. He has caused the French peo thing upon which everybody is con- centrating, and may perhaps be the greatest problems he has faced in ple considerable trouble. The hairy vetch bruchid's life his- main reason why hopper feeding of seeking to revitalize agriculture is is gradually gaining in popular- disorganization on the part of mil tory is much like that of the pea lions of farmers. They are bound weevil, the major pea pest In the tty. by habits of thought and action that Willamette valley, except that it were out of date twenty years ago. feeds on vetch seeds Instead of pea And it isn't a coincidence that the seeds. It lays its eggs on the out farm groups that are really getting side of the pod. The worm hatches COST STUDY SHOWS OREGON somewhere with definite programs from the egg, bores into the pod and LEADS AS FILBERT STATE. —such as the cotton producers of makes itself at home In the seed, Oregon now produces 83 per cent the South and the dairymen of New living there until it becomes a fully York—are those with strong, loy developed beetle like Its parents. It of the filberts grown in the United ally supported, aggressivo coopera- prefers hairy vetch seed, but will States, and with Washington ac also accommodate Itself to Hungar counts for 98 per cent of the domes Governmental relief must always ian vetch. Much Hungarian vetch tic production of what the U. S. be temporary, and it can’t work rev is grown In Oregon, so It should not census calls hazelnuts, according to figures complied in connection with laek food. olutions overnight. POULTRY ROHRMAN Motor Co STRAYED LAST WEEK — NINE calves, coming yearlings, four hei fers and five steers; some Jerseys, some Durham. Will pay for infor mation. J. H. DeMoss, Hermiston. . 28-3tp PAGE THRMI Last Night’s Dinner Was It Good? Was It “Flat”? Was It the Same Old Thing? “VIGORBILT” BABY CHIX, LEG- horns, Reds, Rocks, R.I. Whites. Bloodtested stock—whole blood an tegin test. Buy your chicks from a local institution. Custom hatching. Starter chicks. "Vigorbilt Hatch- ery, Hermiston, Oregon. 28-4tp FOR SALE — SIX JERSEY MILK cows; 100 White Leghorn pul lets, laying 70 per cent. Inquire Herald office. 29-ltc IT IS NOT an easy task for your wife to plan something different every night for dinner. Remember —she is more or less bound to the same stores and shops, and this does not stimulate "something new.” WANTED—2000 EGGS FOR CUS- tom hatching. Freewater Hatch- ery. Phone 38F13. 27-tfc FOR RENT—DAIRY, HAY AND pasture land. P. O. Box 56, Echo, Oregon. 28-2tp Surprise your wife, and guarantee yourself just what you feel like eat- ing tonight by taking something home from down town. SWIFT & CO.—BUYERS OF POUL- try and Eggs. A. M. Smith, Her- miston, Ore., Agent. 271tfc There are many food shops ad vertising NEW things to eat in this very paper. Look through the pag es and then go to one of these shops and pick out exactly what you’ll like to eat TONIGHT. A TEAM OF HORSES FOR SALE— 1 About 1400 lbs. G. G. Smith. Her- | miston. 29-3tp RHODE ISLAND RED HATCHING eggs for sale. Mrs. A. W. Prann, Phone 801. 28-2tc FOR RENT—85-A. NEAR AIRPORT Umatilla. Inquire H. O. Thomp son or write owner E. Van Slatte, W818-5th Ava., Spokane, Wn. Can a cost-of-production survey of this | be in Umatilla soon. 27-2tp industry being carried on by men of I the Oregon State college staff. j WILL TRADE—600-FOOT RUSTIC Planting of filberts in Oregon is Siding for spike-tooth harrow, increasing fairly rapidly and con- two horse cultivator or what have sumption in the United States has you. A. J. Reese, Boardman, Ore. taken a tailspin to about half of the 27-4tp peak figure, but even so there ap- -------------------------------------- — CABINET GRAND pears to be good opportunity in fil- FOR SALE piano, in good condition. D. M. berts for the man who can produce them economically, is the conclusion Walsh, near Umatilla, or write Rt. 28-2tp of A. . Burrier, associate economist 2, Hermiston, Oregon. of the experiment station, and C. E. FOR SALE—2 FLAMO BROODERS. Schuster, federal nut specialist sta- W. J. Warner. 27-tfc tioned at O.S.C. These two men have completed WANTED — USED WASHING MA- the first year’s cost study of filbert chine. leave price and description growing and their report of the at Herald office. 29-ltp 1932 season has just been published as a mimeograph circular of infor WANTED—CATTLE, SHEEP AND hogs. Will pay highest cash price. mation issued by the experiment L. J. Huston, 910 F. St. The Dalles, station, and obtainable free on re Oregon. 19-31P quest. The investigators learned from HOUSE FOR RENT—8-ROOMS & actual figures obtained from 36 modern. E. P. Illsley, Hermiston. growers of five acres or more of fil 28-3tp berts each that it cost an average of 13.7 cents per pound to produce WE PAY CASH FOR FRESH EGGS delivered at Smith’s Second Hand filberts that year. Only about one- fifth of this amount is cash cost, Store. Drop in for quotations. 27-2tc however, the remainder being in Swift & Company. terest on investment and similar FOR BABY CHICKS, TURKEYS OR items for which there is no imme Pullets see or write B. P. Rand, diate out-of-pocket payment. Irrigon, Ore. Local agent, Russell A great variation in costs was Paultry Yards, Hanson Strain Spec- shown ranging from 5.7 cents to 30 laity. 29-3tp cents a pound, but the bulk of the production was in the low cost FOR SALE—RHODE ISLAND RED group with about half the producers eggs, from blood-tested flock, al showing costs below 10 cents. so a tew cockerels. Mrs. A. C. Swar- Those with costs of 17 cents or ner, Hermiston. 28-2tp above were not getting any actual profit at prices of the past few STRAYED TO STANFIELD—ONE Sorrel Mare, branded B on left years. Yield was found to be great- shoulder; one black mare, branded est factor in cost levels. Filberts are one crop that no ser- B on shoulder; one Bay colt, not branded; and one mule colt, bran ious diseases or pests yet attack af ded under one-half circle T, on left ter trees are mature, the investiga stifle. Inquire Buck Sewell, deputy tors point out. Though consump- sheriff, Stanfield. 27-3tc tion has fallen by half, the situation _ is not serious for Oregon producers FOR SALE—11 TONS OF ALFAL- because out of about 13 million | fa hay on the Beddow place. Co- pounds consumed in this country in lumbia District. 23-tfc 1932. all but one million pounds BABY CHIX OF HIGH QUALITY— were imported. Leghorns and heavies. Freewater Hatchery, Phone 38F13 27-tfc HERMISTON, OREGON COLUMBIANS Dancing at Umatilla I SAL MAR. 17 WAR ON RATS BUY RATSKWILL Ratskwill kills rats and mice, but is not a poison. Rats cost the American people millions of dollars yearly. They carry every communicable disease known, such as hydrophobia, and Equine Influenza. Don't pests about the keep home or place of business. — Get rid of them at once. — PRICE 50c For Sale by OREGON HARDWARE & IMPLEMENT CO. Hermiston, Oregon NOTICE OF TIME AND PLACE OF HEARING FINAL ACCOUNT AND REPORT. In the County Court of the State of Oregon for Umatilla County. In the Matter of the Estate of Isabell R om , Deceased, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL PERSONS WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: That Milton A. Ross. executor of the last will and testament of Isa- bell Ross, Deceased, has filed here in his Final Account and Report in the administration of the above en- titled estate; that the County Judge by order duly made and entered herein has appointed Saturday, the 17th day of March, 1934, at the hour of 2:00 P. M. of I that day as the time and the County I Court House at Pendleton, 1 Umatilla Coun- ty, Oregon, as the place where all objections and exceptions to said final account and report will be heard and a settlement of the es- tate made. Dated this 13th day of February, 1934. MILTON ROSS. Executor of the last will and testament of Isabell Ross, Deceased. GEORGE R. LEWIS, Pendleton, Oregon, Attorney for the Eexeutor. (Feb. 15.March 15) H ermiston H erald Business and Professional Cards HERMISTON W. J. WARNER Attorney-at-Law Hermiston - Oregon Hermiston Beauty Shoppe Duart Permanent Wave. Late Appointments by Phone. Phone 141 W. L. Morgan, D. M. D. General Dentistry X-Ray and Diagnosis Phone S-J Bank Bldg. Residence Phone 25-J Sunday and Evenings by Appointment DR. A. E. MARBLE CHIROPRACTOR Office: Two doors west post office Office Hours: 8 to 12 - 1:30 to « Phone 481------- Hermiston, Ore. A. W. CHRISTOPHERSON Physician and Surgeon. Bank Building Office Hours 9-12 and 2-5 Hermiston Post No. 37 Meets first and third Thursday. Legion Auxil iary meets second and fourth Thursday. Legion Hall. PENDLETON ERNEST GHORMLEY 1 MEN’S CLOTHING and LADIES HOSE 301 E. Court St. Phone 326 Pendleton, Oregon Office Phone 523 Res Phone 461 DR. F. L. INGRAM Dependable Dentistry Bond Bldg. Pendleton, Ore. DR. H. A. NEWTON : Dentist Phone 121 X-Ray Work Manicuring, Marcelling Hot Ofl Shampoo, Fingerwaving, Facials Realistic Beauty Shop Finger Wave - 50c and 25c We Specialize In Permanent Waving 606 Main St. Pendleton, Oro. W. G. FISHER NEW AND USED FURNITURE BOUGHT AND SOLD Bowman Hotel Blk. Phone 198 507 Main St. Pendleton, Ore. Pendleton, Oregon W. J. CLARKE HARDWARE TO SELL OR TRADE YOUR PROPERTY SEE Majestic Ranges, Red Jacket Pumps, Iron Pipe, Nells. Fencing Phone 21 211-213 E. Court St. Pendleton, Oregon J. W. CLARKE at G. F. HODGES AGENCY 721 Main St. Pendleton, Ore. WE BRADLEY & SON Shoe Rebuilders We rebuild shoes with machinery your shoes were made on. The only factory machines In Umatilla County. Mall your shoes te us. We pay the return postage. Bet ter shoe 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. PENDLETON ORI