THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1984
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON
FARM CO-OPERATIVE DIVISION
JA MESSAGE
TO
EVERY MEMBER.
Used Cars! WANT ADS
MAN WANTED FOR RAWLEIGH
Route of 800 families. Write im
mediately. Rawlelgh, Dept. ORJ-90-
7-2tp
SA, Oakland, Calif.
1932 Ford V 8
TUDOR SEDAN
HEART TO HEART TALKS WITH NO PATRONAGE
REFUND PAID
Will Close During Football Game.
The Farm Bureau Co-operative
and Grange Co-operative will be
According to the by-laws ♦ closed during the high school foot
governing the Co-operative Ser ♦ ball game Friday afternoon between
vice Station, no patronage re ♦ the hours of 2:45 and 3:45.
fund can be made to any mem
Stanfield Grange Dance.
ber who has allowed his mem ♦
The
Stanfield Grange will givo
bership to become delinquent.
another dance Saturday night, Oc
Information as to the status
of any membership is available ♦ tober 13, with music furnished by
the Cub Wranglers. Everyone is in
at the main office of the Farm
vited to attend and a good time is
Bureau Co-operative.
♦ guaranteed.
$435.00
I
THREE MILLION IN
METHODS OF TREE SURGERY
AAA PAYMENTS DUE
EXPLAINED BY DR. ZELLER.
Agricultural adjustment benefit
In tree surgery, as in human sur
payments in excess of »3,000,000 gery, there is a correct and an in
are scheduled to be distributed to correct way to prepare a wound for
Oregon farmers during October and successful and rapid healing, says
early November under provisions of Dr. S. M. Zeller, plant pathologist
the wheat and corn-hog adjustment of the Oregon experiment station.
programs, according to figures com
Sharp tools are necessary to do
That may be one reason why a piled by the Oregon Extension ser I the job well, Dr. Zeller points out.
good many creameries have been vice. These payments all made from After all diseased tissue has been
caught just recently with bad cream the receipts from federal processing | cut away, healing is facilitated if
on hands and why butter has been taxes, are to compensate Oregon | the wound is shaped up to a point
seized. In some of the instances these growers for restricting production above and below. It is best to cut
concerns took the warning of the in line with the national plan for the edges of a wound at right angles
government officials with a grain of these commodities.
to the surface of the bark, as slash
salt and did not take steps to pre
The amount to be received under ing cuts do not heal readily, he
pare and get in order. It should be the corn-hog plan is more than twice says.
remembered that the federal agents as much as would have been due
When it is necessary to remove a
work in a different manner than lo- Oregon farmers under the original whole branch, make the cut as near
cal officials. They have wider pow- state production figures assigned the parent branch or trunk as pos
ers and they are more free from lo by the bureau of crop estimates, sible. Stubs of branches can never
cal influences that often hamper and though it is still below the figure heal, says Dr. Zeller. They die and
make ineffective the work of state considered just by many county al- become infection courts for wood
or local agents. The federal agents lotment committees and the state decaying fungi.
as a rule are well trained and know college extension service
When cavities and decayed parts
their business.
The final base production figure are present, a simple method of
allowed Oregon Is 229,165 hogs for tree surgery may prevent much
There does not seem to be much, the total of all contracts. This fig greater expenditure of time and
if any, criticism being made against ure compares with 108,250 total money later. The heart of a tree
the federal inspectors for condemn contract base given in the first es is dead wood and of no importance
ing cream that should have been al timate of 142,250 for the entire to the tree except for strength, Dr.
lowed to pass. They seem to be rely state including those hogs not under Zeller explains. It is is decayed, it
ing principally on taste and smell. contract. On the other hand it falls is therefore best to remove it, if the
When dealing with cream that is more than 20,000 hogs short of the time and labor required are not too
third grade this sort of inspection 250,000 which the extension offic great. Where the cavity extends
should be sufficient to determine ials considered the absolute mini down the branch a considerable dis
that it is unfit to go into food. There mum which could justly be assign tance, it is necessary to provide a
is no doubt that in some localities ed as Oregon’s quota.
hole at the lower end for a drain, or
the sense of smell alone is sufficient
While the summer-long effort of if it is cup shaped the lower edge
grounds on which to make a deter- the farmer leaders and extension of the cup may be cut away to al
minization without using the addi service representatives to obtain a low drainage.
tional check of tasting.
just quota for Oregon was not en-
After the wound is cleaned and
tirely successful, the outcome was shaped, a disinfectant is applied. A
There are large numbers of cream a considerable gain even over what solution of corrosive sublimate,
eries which are not going to have was declared to be the third and part to 1000 parts of water, is ef-
any trouble in changing their meth "final” quota of 213,000 hogs. fective. This material is a deadly
ods in order to stop the buying of points out F. L. Ballard, vice-direc poison and must be treated as such,
third-grade cream for they have tor of the extension servivce.
Dr. Zeller warns. It must also be
Mr. Ballard adds that the trouble kept in glass or porcelain contain-
been refusing it for so long that pat
rons know better than to bring or encountered in Oregon and a number ers, as It attacks metals.
send it to the creamery. The only of other states in carrying through
When the wound has been washed
thing this class of creameries are go the corn-hog program was not the with this solution a wound dressing
ing to have to worry about is to see fault of the plan itself, which was is applied, the sole object of which
that foreign material is kept out of fundamentally sound, but arose is to prevent infection by decay-pro
the cream. It seems peculiar, but from poor administration of the plan ducing organisms until the wound
good quality cream is liable to con- in this state by some representatives is healed by callus formation. As a
tain a large amount of material that of the corn-hog section.
wound dressing, Bordeaux paint,
Corn-hog benefit payments auth prepared by slowly stirring raw lin
should not be there.
orized for Oregon now total $859,- seed oil into commercially prepared
One sees at different creameries 365 of which two-fifths is payable Bordeaux, comes the nearest to com
the results of sediment tests on var at once. Under the original quota bining the necessary properties. Dr
ious grades of cream. Some of the they would have been less than half Zeller says. Applied with care, this
best quality of cream has been found that sum. Baker and Union are the paint will remain for several years.
to contain a large amount of mater first Oregon counties to receive the
ADVANCE IN FARM PRICES
ial. This simply denotes carelessness first payment checks.
Final 1933 wheat payments are LARGELY DUE TO DROUGHT.
on the part of the cream producer,
Producers are evidently going to estimated at »834,800 in this state,
The general level of farm prices
have to be more careful in taking while the first 1934 wheat payment
care of their cream. They are going to be distributed immediaately af advanced about 10 per cent during
to have to brush off their cows be ter the former, is estimated at $1,- the last two months, according to
fore milking, to strain the milk ef 829,427, making at total distribu information given in a report on
fectively and to prevent the possi tion for the next month or so of the agricultural situation just re
bility of flies and bugs and any oth more than three million dollars in leased by the college agricultural
extens'on service. This boost in
er material getting into it. And, in this state.
Meanwhile county hog-corn com farm prices is attributed more to
addition, many of them will be com
pelled to fix up some means of cool mittees have completed arrangements the drought than to stranger de-
for taking the referendum among mand conditions.
ing and holding.
The general exchange value of
contract signers on the twin ques
tion of continuing some corn-hog farm products has advanced 10 per
Evidently no creamery is going to
plan for 1935 and of working out cent since a year ago, having reach
be free from the danger of butter
a single contract for all grains and ed nearly three-fourths of the pre-
seizures unless they pay attention livestock starting In 1936. Votes war parity level, the report shows.
to this matter of foreign material in
will be taken in one or two meet- Wool, oats and corn have climbed
the cream. It is not going to be
Ings in each county before October above 90 per cent of parity, while
enough to depend on straining in the
hay, wheat and barley have been
the 18th.
plant. Once cream is contaminated
Additional purchases of drought moving toward that mark.
It is difficult if not impossible to cattle, in excess of the original
Indicative of the general reduc
remove all of the Contaminating mat
quotas which expired in September, tion in crop production, the estima-
erial. Government chemists by the
bave been authorized In Washington ted combined yield of 33 of the
aid of the microscope and the incu
as a "tapering off” process. Oregon principal crops will be 18 per cent
bator are able to determine whether
has been allotted »63,374 in this less than last year and 22 per cent
the cream underwent contamination
cleanup buying which will purchase below the 13-year average, the re
or not and to what extent an ef
about 4500 additional head. State port says. A late potato crop ap
fort was made to clean it up.
directors In charge of the cattle proximately equal to 1933 but 26
buying have been authorized to million bushels below average was
Effective straining equipment Is purchase cattle only from producers Indicated on September 1.
rapidly being devised for use in the clearly unable to provide adequate
Cash farm income for the whole
creamery. But the same principle feed supplies for their stock.
country is estimated at about six
applies to cream for churning as to
Oregon wheat farmers used near billion dollars in the year 1934, ap
milk for consumption as milk. The ly half of their contracted acres as proximately one billion more than in
contamination should not take place. additional fallow land, according to 1933 but nearly four billion under
Effective straing a few minutes af a survey made of 26 states including the 1926-1930 average. Oregon
ter milking Is much better than ef Oregon. The figures gathered by farm income is expected to total
fective straining of the cream after the AAA show for Oregon 46.6 per around 20 per cent greater than last
it reaches the creamery several days cent of the land left out of wheat year, but will fall short of the 1926-
later. Unless this campaign is made used for fallow: 23.3 per cent was in 1930 level about 40 per cent,
to carry back to the farm much of new seeding for pasture or hay, cording to the circular. For the
the benefit in quality improvement ■lightly more than 20 per cent lay whole country, from 10 to 12 per
will be lost, Rejecting third-grade completely idle, and 8.3 per cent cent of the total 1934 cash farm in-
cream iss not going to mean a loss was used for food and feed product come will be derived from agricul
in volume. The fanner who finds ion for home use Less than 2 per tural adjustment rental and benefit
he cannot sell his cream will change cent was devotsd to weed control payments, and the reet from market
bis methods Of handling.
and other miscellaneous purposes. ings.
of too rapid expansion in hog pro
duction be attempted wholly through
a contract dealing with corn pro
duction alone, but western men ob
jected strenuously to this at the re
cent Salt Lake conference, contend
ing that it would be unfair to con-
tinue the processing tax on hogs and
pay out the proceeds entirely to
corn growers.
FOR SALE—LARGE CIRCULATOR
heater. Good condition. Phone NEW CATALOG LISTS MANY
76-M.
7-ltc
DELINQUENT MEMBERS.
From The Creamery Journal.
Nothing has happened in the
creamery business in a long time to
stir up as much concern among in-
dividual creamerymen and plant
employes as this campaign for clean
cream and for the rejection of what
is termed third grade. There have
been a lot of attempts in the past at
cream grading and a lot of energy
spent in trying to get producers
generally to take better care of their
cream. In most of these attempts af
ter awhile the campaign died out
and maybe some gain was made and
possibly not. In most cases when
there was another attempt made to
get creamerymen to start on another
campaign many of them would re-
fuse because they felt it would end
up just like the previous attempts.
PAGE THREE
1930 Model A
Sport Roadster
EDUCATIONAL MOVIE FILMS.
LOW-CUT TOP
$225.00
1929 Dodge Six
Truck
$225.00
1930 Model A Ford
PANEL
$210.00
1927 Nash Coupe '
LIGHT SIX
$125.00
1927 Model T
DRESSERS AND ROCKING CHAIRS
CORVALLIS—A new catalog list
Wanted — Other furniture. Her
ing
all moving picture films, lantern
miston New & Second Hand Store.
7-ltc slide sets and other materials avail
able from the department of visual
SMALL RANGE FOR SALE—PRAC- instruction, has just been issued
tically new. Mrs. Wm. Davis. In- by the general extension division of
7-ltp the Oregon state system of higher
quire Red & White Store.
education.
FOR RENT—15-ACKES WITH 5-
The department of visual instruc-
room house, 5 miles east of Her tlon of the entire
system Is located
miston. Inquire Herald office. 7-ltc on the Oregon State college campus
FOR RENT—10 ACRES LAND. with U. S. Burt in charge. The
Good plastered house, % mile W. present catalog lists the largest col
Columbia school on high school bus lection of such materials ever gath
6-ltc ered together for educational use in
route. H. P. DeMoss.
this state, all of which are avail
WILL TRADE »1000 EQUITY IN able for public use on payment of a
Bend residential property for small fee ranging from five cents to
property of equal value in Hermis- 25 cents each, used to cover partial-
2-tfc ly the expense of packing and in-
ton. Inquire at Herald.
specting.
LIVESTOCK WANTED — CATTLE
Many of the lantern slide sets and
Sheep and Hogs. L. J. Huston, moving picture films include lec-
The Dalles, Oregon. Write me or • ures, which may be given along
leave name at Hale's Confectionery with the pictures, making them
Dec. 6. adaptable to a wide
variety of group
SWIFT & CO.—BUYERS OF POUL- meetings. A copy of the (catalog
try and Eggs. A. M. Smith, Her- may be had free on request from
271tfc the Corvallis office.
miston, Ore., Agent.
TUDOR
$50.00
ROHRMAN
Motor Co
PHONE 571
HERMISTON, OREGON
VOTE ON FUTURE CONTROL
ASKED OF C0RN-H0G MEN.
Corn-hog
adjustment contract
signers in Oregon will be called upon
by their county association to vote
soon, probably during the second
week in October, on two questions
submitted from Washington and
growing out of the recent regional
conferences, in one of which exten
sion officials of Oregon State college
took part.
AAA officials foresee serious dif-
ficulties in the next few years if the
natural reaction from present drouth
conditions are allowed to develop,
aS they have in past years, into a
cycle which will carry production of
forage crops to the opposite extreme
stimulated by scarcity and high pri-
ces of the present.
Such a condition, they believe,
would be disastrous to the corn and
other forage crop producers and the
livestock growers as well, particu
larly the hog growers in the corn
belt states.
In order to get a definite expres
sion of opinion from growers them
selves. the AAA officials have re
quested the state extension services
to arrange for the taking of a ref
erendum by each corn-hog county
association on the following ques
tions:
1. Do you favor an adjustment
program dealing with corn and hogs
In 1935?
2. Do you favor a one-contract
per-farm adjustment program deal
ing with grains and livestock to be-
come effective in 1936?
It is explained thaat if the pro
ducers vote favorably on the first
question, AAA officials will confer
further with representatives of pro
ducers in developing details of a
suitable contract. Any 1935 pro
gram will follow the general out
line of the 1934 program but bene-
fit payments would probably be
somewhat larger for corn and ma
terlally less for hogs than under the
program this year.
In voting on the question, wes-
tern producers will be faced with
the fact that this region is a deficit
area for both corn and hogs. Sug
gestion was once made that control
ALL TRUE
By CATHERINE DeMOSS.
Yes, he's only a farmer from somewhere out west.
But what I was saying, wasn’t in jest;
For just as sure as I'm speaking to you
Thaat man is surely a nobleman too.
Method Increases Potato Crop.
ALBANY—The practice of plant
Ing whole tubers and removing all
but three sprouts above ground is
apparently going to give Hollis Au-
derway of Lebanon an increased
yield of potatoes, reports Floyd C.
Mullen, county agent. Mr. Auder-
way says he planted large potatoes
due to the dry weather conditions. |
W. J. WARNER
Duart Permanent Wave.
Late Appointments by Phone.
Phone 141
W. L. Morgan, D. M. D.
General Dentistry
X-Ray and Diagnosis
DR. A. E. MARBLE
Phene 9-J
Bank Bldg.
Residence Phone 25-J
Bunday and Evenings by
Appointment
CHIROPRACTOR
Office: Two doors west post office
Office Hours: 8 to 12 - 1:30 to 6
Phone 481------- Hermiston, Ore.
A. W. CHRISTOPHERSON
Physician and Surgeon.
Hermiston Post No. 37 :
Meets first and third
Thursday. Legion Ausli-
iary meets second and
fourth Thursday.
Legion Hall.
Bank Building
Office Hours
9-12 and 2-5
PENDLETON
ERNEST GHORMLEY :
MEN’S CLOTHING and
LADIES HOSE
Never toadies to the rich,
It’s the man that's in the ditch.
He thinks of night and day.
Is that noble, do you say?
Bond Bldg.
H’es untrained, unaccustomed to rule?
Say, old friend, did you go to school!
He's been governor out there In the West
And they tell me,—"Sure, he was one of the best.”
The country's in need of younger men?
Why that old boy will do the work of ten.
Fellows like you and me
Years only toughen a staunch oak tree.
You say he railed on you one day last week
So you know whereof you speak?
‘Tis strange, for it’s most always true.
When he meets a fellow, he falls too.
His family's obscure;
Why his wife's a
Built up a system out
You fellows have
no outstanding relation.
librarian known all over the nation.
• here in the West
copied for you knew it was best.
You're convinced. If he’s what I say
You’ll pull for him strong though his foretop’s grey.
You're caught; you were surely out when he called
For Congressman Pierce le decidedly bald.
Manicuring, Marcelling Hot Oil
Shampoo,
Fingerwaving,
Facials
Realistic Beauty Shop
301 E. Court St.
Phone 326
Pendleton, Oregon
Office Phone 523
Knows the facts he talks about;
Never leaves a bit of doubt.
He can talk to president or king
Because his speech has the true-blue ring.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the undersigned. Sheriff of Umatil-
a County, State of Oregon, will at
the hour of ten o'clock in the fore-
noon on the 5th day of November,
1934, at the front door of the Coun-
y Court House of Umatilla County,
Dregon, in Pendleton, Oregon, offer
or sale to the highest bidder for
cash in hand, subject to the mini-
num price of Twenty-five Dollars,
(»25.00), the following described
parcel of real pioperty heretofore
by Umatilla County, State of Ore
gon, acquired for delinquent taxes,
to-wft:
The West ten acres of the North
west Quarter of the Northeast
Quarter of Section 22, Township
5, North, Range 27, EWM, in
Umatilla County, Oregon.
Dated this the 1st day of October,
1934.
R. E. GOAD, Sheriff ef
Umatilla County. State of Oregon.
(Oct. 4—Nov. 1)
Hermiston Beauty Shoppe
Attorney-at-Law
Hermiston - Oregon
He is honest, through and through
Solid as bed-rock; all true blue.
Isn’t big enough for the job?
You are sure a down-right snob.
Isn’t cultured! I’ll tell you now
You don’t get ball-room culture following a plow.
But he is a clever wit;
Listen to him and you'll learn quite a bit.
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE
HERMISTON
That man's served his people well;
Put their interests first they say.
Not always thinking of the pay.
Didn't need the money then?
You are sure no judge of men.
He has known the scourge of debt
But never let that swerve him yet.
Call for Bids.
Sealed blds will be received by the
West Extension Irrigation District
up to 2:00 P. M., November 6, 1934,
for the purchase of the District
warehouse located at Irrigon, Ore-
gon.
Certified check, money order, or
cash must accompany all bids to the
full amount of bld, and successful
bidder is required to remove build
ing by December 15, 1934. The
Board of Directors of the District
reserves the right to reject any or
all bids.
A. C. HOUGHTON, Secretary.
(Oct. 11-18-25)
Business and Professional Cards
For years, so they tell
Been offered bribes? Of course its true
Just the same as me or you.
But he's turned them down with scorn
Shows he is a nobleman born.
and too many sprouts appeared
above ground. He removed the ex-
cess sprouts from all but a small
plot In the field. Where this was
done the potato vines are several in-
ches taller and the tubers consider-
ably larger than those of the check
plot.
Finger Wave - 50c and 25e
We Specialize In Permanent
Waving
806 Main St.
Pendleton, Or*.
Res. Phone 461
DR. F. L. INGRAM
Dependable Dentistry
W. G. FISHER
Pendleton, Ore.
DR. H. A. NEWTON
NEW AND USED FURNITURE
BOUGHT AND SOLD
'
|
Bowman Hotel Blk.
Phone 198
507 Main St.
Pendleton, Ore.
Dentist
Phone 12
X-Ray Work
Pendleton, Oregon
W. J. CLARKE
TO SELL OR TRADE YOUR
PROPERTY SEE
Majestic Ranges, Red Jacket
Pumps, Iron Pipe, Nalls, Fencing
Phone 21
211-213 E Court St.
Pendleton. Oregon
HARDWARE
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 to us.
We pay the return postage. Bet
ter shoe repairing for less mon
ey. Give us a trial.
Bradlev A Son
643 Main St.
Pendleton, Ore.
Specialize in Good Furni
ture at Lowest Possible
Prices
Free Delivery
to your door.
PRICES MEET
PENDLETON OREC I