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VOLUME XXVIII
WILD GAME HUNTING
SEASON SET BY
STATE COMMISSION
OPEN SEASON AGAIN PLACED ON
BULL
(T
NUMBER 50
ELK
Territory Specified for Elk Hunting ;
Full Information Obtained in
Game Law Books.
Sportsmen have been looking for
ward to the release of wild game
hunting season by the Oregon State
Game Commission with the 1934
hunting regulations. These were
sent out by the commission Mon
day, August 6.
All opening and closing orders
have been determined on the basis
of providing each county with the
greatest variety of hunting consist
ent with conservation of game to
the ultimate benefit of the state at
large.
Open season on buck deer with
forked horns is from September 20
to October 25, both dates inclusive.
Pag limit, two Columbia blacktail
deer or one mule deer, with the re
quirement that both deer tags must
be affixed to the male deer.
Open season on bull elk having
horns is between November 5 to
November 11, both dates inclusive.
Open territory, all of Baker county
except that portion lying southwest
of the John Day highway; Wallowa
county north of the base line and
west of the Imnaha river; all of
Union and Wallowa counties except
approximately 20,4 00 acres in the
Conklin Springs area and known as
the Mt. Emily Game Refuge; that
portion of Grant county lying north
of the Middle Fork of the John Day
river and east of the Pendleton-John
Day highway.
Chinese Pheasant open season in
cludes dates between October 15 to
October 31. Unless otherwise pro
vided for, the bag limit on Chinese
pheasants shall be 4 of such birds
in any one day or 8 in any 7 con-
secutive days, provided, that it is
unlawful to take more than 1 fe
male Chinese pheasant In any 7
consecutive days.
Open season on Hungarian part
ridges includes October-15 to Oc
tober 31, in Wasco, Sherman, Mor
row, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa and
Baker counties.
The bag limit is 4 such birds In
any one day and not to exceed 8 in
any 7 consecutive days.
The quail open season, mountain
or plumed and California or valley
quail only from October 15 to Oc
tober 31, both dates inclusive, in
Umatilla, Morrow, Wasco and Sher
man counties.
The bag limit on quail is 10 birds
in any 7 consecutive days.
Hunters have from September 20
to October 25, as open season for
grouse and native pheasants, in
Umatilla and Morrow counties. The
bag limit is 4 such birds in any one
day or 8 in any 7 consecutive days.
Game laws may be obtained from
Frank Bilderback, president of the
Hermiston Rod & Gun Club.
-----------
MISSOURI FURNISHES BEST
PROGRAM AT STATES PICNIC
Representatives from
Missouri
furnished the best number on the
program at the States' annual picnic
held in Columbia park Sunday. Aug
ust 5, as voted by all those present
representing Ohio, Indiana, Iowa,
Illinois and Wisconsin.
In the afternoon a pot luck din
ner was served picnic style followed
by the program put on by repre
sentatives from each state, with a
prize awarded to the group pesent-
ing the best entertainment. Mrs.
Baxter Hutchison was general
chairman for this part of the pro
gram, which contained the novel
feature of a hog calling contest, and
ear wriggling contest. These were
won by Mrs. Wm. Mikesell and H.
J. Ott.
The program as a whole was un
der the direction of Claude Upham.
------------------
Monument Resident Dies.
Rev. O. W. Payne of Hermiston
conducted funeral services for Newt
Robinson of Monument, Ore., Tues-
day Mr. Robinson passed away
Sunday. August 5. He was a brother-
in-law of Mrs. Rose Lawson who
lives here with her daughter Mrs.
Harvey Payne. Mr. Payne was ac-
companied by his wife. Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Payne, and Mrs. Una
Dinwiddie.
ans
e
•
,
1
__. .
Poops, ma, nato ono amotne. but
SUBSCRIPTION, $1.00 PER YEAR
HERMISTON, UMATILLA COUNTY. OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1934
GLASSES
LOST
AT
UMATILLA
RECOVERED NEAR PORTLAND
♦
A pair of horn-rimmed, bl- •
♦ focal glasses which were lost •
• near the Umatilla ferry land- •
♦ Ing by Mrs. Phoebe Palmer of •
• Hermiston, two weeks ago •
• were returned today by W. T. •
• Moore of Hermiston who re- •
• covered them from a hitch- •
• hiker on the highway near •
♦ Portland.
•
•
An ad had been inserted in •
• the Herald asking for the re- •
♦ turn of the glasses and when •
• the finder learned that Mr. •
• Moore was from Hermiston he •
• produced the ad clipping and •
• the -glasses. It took a crisp •
• $1 bill to extract the glasses •
• from the hitch-hiker.
•
494444*4*******
SYLVIA SHUTTER HEADS
QUEEN CONTEST IN RACE
J ‘ ite '
In the election of a queen to reign
at the Umatilla Project fair to be
held 'September 21-22, Miss Sylvia
Shutter of Hermiston, is leading all
contestants after the first dance
held at Echo last Saturday night.
Miss Helen Jendrzejewski of Colum
bia is second.
Supporters and candidates are
warming up to the contest and vot
ing is expected to be more fluent as
the fair dâte nears. The next op
portunity supporters will have to
vote for their choice for queen will
be at Irrigon, Saturday night,' Aug
ust 11. Music for the dance will be
furnished by "The Six Sharps.” It
will then be determined which
candidate will retain the lead.
Voting Saturday night at Echo
placed candidates in line as fol
lows: Mary Lee Rhea, 22, Stanfield;
Dorothy Mudge, 20, Echo; Bessie
Dexter, 12, Umatilla; Floy Atte-
burs. 10. Westland; and Billie
Markham, Irrigon.
The candidate receiving the high
est number of votes will reign as
queen over the fair and the other
contestants will act as her attend-
ants.
' ~
4 i
LEXINGTON GIRL BRIDE AT
ATTRACTIVE CHURCH WEDDING
Miss Frma Duvall, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Duvall of Lex
ington, and Ralph Wickersham, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Wickersham
of Portland, were married at an im
pressive wedding which was solem
nized at the Congregational church
Sunday afternoon at 2:30 in Lex
ington. Rev. Joseph Pope of Heppner
read the sacred lines.
The bride was charming in tra
ditional white silk flat crepe and
her veil of silk tulle was caught
with orange blossoms. She carried
a shower of roses and lilies-of-the-
valley. Her attendants. Miss Helen
Valentine as maid of honor, wore
pale blue silk crepe with white tur
ban and veil, and the bridesmaids
Miss Eleanor Wickersham, sister of
the groom from Portland,- Ore., and
Miss Eula McMillan of Lexington,
wore pale pink silk net and white
turbans with veil. All carried bou
quets of roses and sweet peas.
Miss Ruth Dinger sang "I Love
You Truly” and "Because” preced
ing the ceremony with Miss Mar
garet Wickersham at the piano. The
bride was given away by her father.
Mr. Earle Wodtli acted as best man
Pollowing the ceremony a wed
ding reception was held at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hunt. Mrs.
Elmer Hunt poured and Miss Lennä
Wald of Stanfield presided at the
the service trays. Serving was done
by Miss Peggy Warner, Miss Grace
Burchell, Miss Irma Lane and Miss
Gwen Evans.
The bride is the only granddaugh
ter of Mr, and Mrs. J. W. Waid of
Stanfield and was married nearly
58 years to the day since the occa
sion of her grandparent's wedding.
The young couple left following
the reception for a short wedding
trip, after which they will make
their home in Portland. The bride
attended the University of Oregon
where she was a member of Alpha
Delta Pi sorority. She Is a graduate
of Oregon State Normal. Mr. Wick
ersham is a graduate of the Univer
sity of Oregon and also held an as-
sistantship in psychology.
Mrs. Wickersham is a grand niece
of Mrs. Minnie Norton of Hermis-
ton. and cousin to Mr. and Mrs. J.
M. Norton. Both attended the wed-
ding Sunday
ANNUAL TURKEY
TOUR SCHEDULED
SATURDAY, AUG. 18
TEN CABLOADS LOCAL WATER
MELONS SHIPPED THIS WEEK.
I
Ten carloads of locally grown
watermelons have been shipped thia
week by Al Bolstad who has leased
60-acres from A. W. Moser which
he planted to melons. Five of the
ten cars went to Portland markets
and five to eastern markets. Mr.
Bolstad estimated, that during the
peak season next week, between 20
and 25 cars will be shipped. The
market has ranged around 317 a
ton, he said.
Fifteen men and two trucks have
been working in the melon harvest,
Mr. Bolstad has grown melons at
Boardman for the past three year
but has never entered into this fleh
on such a commercial scale. This is
the largest commercial melon grow
ing ever attempted on this project,
All the melons are of fine quallt;
and are bringing top market pulce
C. Hartwig, with
Portiani
commercial clearance house, believe
there is a future for commercial
melon growing on the project. •
local melons are boosted end adver
tised sufficiently.
ira
—dar)
on
612 (a
i
TOUR WILL START FROM EX-
PERIMENT STATION.
Officials From Turkey Growers’ As
sociations Will Visit; Picnic
at Columbia Park.
The annual turkey tour sponsored
by the Eastern Oregon Turkey
Growers’ association will be conduct
ed Saturday, August 18, starting at
the Umatilla Experiment Station
south of Hermiston.
After leaving the experiment sta
tion the tour will continue to the
Kelley-Boynton farm, the Merrill
Potter farm an’d the E. G. Tilden
farm. At each place inspection of
the brooding system, the range and
present turkey flocks will be made.
Harold K. Dean, superintendent
of the experiment station, gives sta
tistics on feeding and disease con
trol as found by the station, with
each flock under separate feed ra
tions observed during the lectures.
A wealth of information may be ob
tained on these tours, and the presi
dent of the association J. Jendrze
jewski, points out that every turkey
grower should plan to be one of
the many making the tour.
6 '
I
JOHNSON WALLOPS HYDEN
Franklin Delano Rooosevelt who passed through Umatilla Friday, Aug
ust 3, on his special train after visiting the power dam site at Bonneville,
enroute to Grande Coulee in Washington. The train slowed down at Uma-
tilla and the 400 peopole gathered there were able to see the president
and his two sons as they waved to the crowd. At the Umatilla rapids
dam site a huge bonfire was built and with the car lights from about 90
At the termination of the tour a cars facing the track as the train passed, quite a demonstration was
picnic dinner will be held at Co staged. E. P. Dodd of Hermiston received a telegram sent from the presi
lumbia park followed by a short dent’s train at Wallula, acknowledging appreciation of the demonstration.
program. Speakers of note will be
H. E. Cosby, extension poultryman
Return from N. D. Trip.
RECORD AMAZING INCREASE IN
from Corvallis; J. C. Leedy, mana
sons,
Mrs.
A.
E.
Marble
and
two
TRAVEL TO NATIONAL PARKS.
ger of the Oregon Turkey Growers’
Co-operative of Portland; A. Wil- Ralph and Harold. returned last
Spokane. Wn.—Travel into Yel-
lardson, sales agent for the North- Friday from North Dakota where
western Turkey Growers' associa- they visited in Regan, Fargo, and lowstone Park continued its am az
tion at Los Angeles; F. L. Ballard, Grand Rapids. At Regan they visi ing increase and is still 10,000 grea
vice director of Extension for Ore- ted Ella Schilling who attended ter than in ’29, the largest travel
gon; and Ray Darling, district school here last year and who will year in park history, according to
manager of the Washington Egg & enter nurses’ training at the hospi- monthly summary up to August 1,
tai in Bismark, September 1st. Just released by Roger W. Toll, park su
Poultry Producers.
before reaching Fargo the Marbles perintendent.
Musical numbers for the program passed through Casselton, which is
Visitors to Yellowstone to August
are being arranged for by Donald Miss Jessie Brierley’s old home, 1st, numbered 149,403, compared
DeMoss.
While at Bismark they tried to en- with 94,255 last year and 139,631
ter the capital grounds to view the to August 1st, 1929.
house in which Theodore Roosevelt
Splendid increases are also shown
Final Summer Tonsil Clinic.
formerly lived, but were advised not at Glacier National Park and Rain
Dr. A. W. Christopherson, city to ask for admittance because of the
ier National Park Indicating that
health officer of Hermiston, an disturbance following the ousting of the people of the United States are
nounces the final 310 tonsil clinic Governor Langer.
giving a magnifeont response to the
for the summer, Wednesday, August
program of the Secretary of Interior
15. Terms will be the same as for
JOHN B. KENNEY
in announcing the year 1934 as Na
the two previous clinics which fee
John B. Kenney of Stanfield died tional Parks Year.
includes the entire care. All those early Monday morning. August 6,
The comparative figures for Gla
interested should register at the after an illness of several months.
cier Park to August 1st are 57,182
earliest possible date.
He is survived by two brothers, Geo. people this year and 36,533 for
B. Kenney of Wilbur, Wn., and W. 1933.
C. Kenney of Gold Hill, Ore., and a
Pay $5 Fines.
sister in Tennessee. He was a mem
Will Teach First Grade.
Buster Rands of Boardman and ber of the Odd Fellow lodge at Stan
Miss Esther Boese of Spokane,
Bob Quick of Pendleton were fined field and also of the Elk’s lodge in
Wn., has been elected to teach the
$5 in justice court Tuesday night Pendleton.
before P. P. Sullivan, City Justice
Funeral services were held from first grade in the Hermiston public
of the Peace, charged with disoor- Folsom’s funeral home Thursday school. She will fill the vacancy left
derly conduct and assault and bat- afternoon at 2:30, with interment by the resignation of Miss Rachel
Sloan of Stanfield.
tery.
in the Pendleton cemetery.
IN TUESDAY’S SMOKER
Dave Johnson of Boardman gave
Tiny Hyden, Chicago CCC, a terrif-
fic walloping in the bout staged at
the Hermiston auditorium Tuesday,
August 7, promoted by Joe Quick.
Johnson started strong and was
giving the beet he had to Hyden
when he complained of being hit
low. After a doctor examined him he
wis given five minutes rest. The de
cision was given to Johnson.
George Twilliger of Walla Walla
was awarded a technical knockout
in the opening minute of the third
round against Cliff Mytlnger of
Pendleton. Buster Rands challenged
Twilliger to a bout at Boardman,
August 24.
In the fight between Emil Sater
and Red Thompson of Hermiston a
draw was called. The first round
went to Sater, but Thompson came
in a little stronger in the second
with a few upper cuts. Both tired
readily and the referee called a
draw.
Shinkle was given the decision in
the fight—Shinkle 147, Umatilla,
vs. O’Brien CCC, 145. Shinkle
knocked O'Brien down four times in
the opening minute of play appar-
ently unable to put up defense.
In the special event between
Shorty Williams vs. Wildcat Turn-
er, the fans cheered from
I
the open
Ing minute of battle. The referee
stopped the fight In the second
round.
As an opening event Bobby Quick
and young Whitsett battled, but
were stopped after the first round
when Quick battered Whitsett.
Logan Todd acted as referee.
FILM DRAMA OF HISTORY IS
BRILLIANT; AT OASIS.
Leaves Cut of Aunt Lu’s Diary
fes
NO w ON I
HE ROor il
WHY Tor
AVE Yu
H47S
I
"Catherine the Great," another
brilliant historical film drama from
the London studio that produced
"The Private Life of Henry VIII,”
which plays at the Oasis Sunday and
Monday, Introduces a new screen
personality of charm and splendid
ability in Elizabeth Bergner and
presenting Douglas Fairbanks, Jr..
in the most Important achievement
of his career.
The new film refrains from the
broad comedy that kept “Henry
VIII" on the borderland of farce and
devotes itself rather to the skilifu
development of * dramatic story it
a background of
barba rom
splendor and license of the court o
old Russia.
The picture makes no pretense ol
following history, save In the facts
that Catherine was a German girl
who became the wife and later the
successor of a czar named Peter.
The empress as portrayed by Miss
Bergner Is a young woman of deep
and single devotion to her husband,
patiently suffering Ignominy and
abuse at his hands, and wresting the
throne from the erratic frenzies of
a madman.
Young Fairbanks gives a splendi
performance in the unsympathetic
character of the grand duke who be
comes cur. a terrible and pathetic
creature with a warped mind full of
surging ambition, brooding suspic-
ions and violent passions. The oth
er role of importance is that of the
Empress Elizabeth, played convine-
ingly by Flora Robson.
THREE DAIRY HERDS
HOLD TESTING
RECORD IN ASS’N.
52 COWS AVERAGE 40 POUNDS
BUTTERFAT IN JULY.
Dairymen Express Desire to Obtain
Purebred Milking Shorthorn
Bulls; One New Member.
For the past three months the
same herds in the Umatilla Herd
improvement association have been
listed as high herds, according to
the report as made up by Al Ken
nings, association tester. These
herds belong to Alpha Christley, L
W. Owens and Enos Martin.
During July there were 35 herd
n test with 552 cows enrolled oí
vhich 76 were dry. These herds
produced 308,994 pounds of milk,
ontaining 13,411.7 pounds fat,
with 63 averaging 40 lbs. fat.
Several dairymen, the report
1
fates,/have expressed a desire to
obtain purebred Milking Shorthorn
bulls from dams that have proven
to be good. The report also says
that six cows were culled out as be
ing non-productive, and three cows
in thé association sold tor dairy pur
poses. J. L. Patch of Echo is a new
member, joining this month, the re
port shows.
For the five months since the be
ginning of the testing year, high
herds to date, dry herds included,
are:
Over 20 cows, J. H. Reid herd of
35 grade jerseys producing 3039.5
lbs. milk, testing 149.3 lbs. fat. and
the Alpha Christley herd of 36 grade
Guernseys and Jerseys, producing
3156.ribs. milk, testing 146.8 lbs.
Proms iatao < wS owned by L.
Owens, 26 pure red Jerseys, pro-
milk, testing
ducing 3144.3 Ths
139.9 Ibs. fat, an
trell herd of 15 grade Jerseys, pro-
ducing 2922.5 lbs. milk, testing
127.4 lbs. fat.
Herds under 12 cows are owned
by Enos Martin, mixed breeds, pro
ducing 3942.4 lbs. milk, testing
177.8 lbs. fat, and the L. C. Dyer
herd Of 8 purebred Jerseys, produc-
Ing 2714.9 lbs. milk, testing 138.9
lbs. fat.
The two high cows in the asso-
elation for July are owned by Al-
pha Christley and T. G. Gregory.
The first, "Juanita,” a 4-year-old
purebred Jersey produced 1553 lbs.
milk containing 66.8 lbs. fat. The
5-year-old
second, "Bubbles,” ■
grade Jersey produced 1111 lbs.
milk. containing 64.9 lbs. fat. High
cows have come from the same
herds for the past two months, with
"Juanita” holding the first rating.
W.
Weather Report.
Max. Min.
Date
August 2 ............................. 93 .... 64
52
85
August a
84
August
91
August 5
85
56
August 6
85
August 7
40
91
August
There was .06 precipitation dur
ing the week. The nights are turn
ing colder and the day sgetting
shorter.
ALONG THE CONCRETE
Frank and Albert Stone Inquiring
of the jeweler what it would cost to
put "one hand on one watch.”
Gale Felthouse dividing his ex
ra stamps with a friend.
George Wagner teaching his
Daschund to climb Into the truck
when called.
AI Quiring teaching his newly
acquired hound to chew a bone. He
(the bound) seemed to have some
difficulty In learning to place hie
paws on the offending bone, deco
rated with particles of meat.
Mrs. Lenore Hudson keeping her
dog moving along to his work at
the creamery as watchdog.
"Gene” Pierce was never afraid
of any opponent while playing on
the “Bulldog” team in high school,
but a barking Fox Terrier bluffed
him out on a back porch Monday.
Of course the little spitfire Fox did
never
sound ferocious, but
thought 1» of "Gene.”