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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1936)
FARM CO-OPERATIVE DIVISION A MESSAGE TO E^ERY MEMBER. over two feet long and very much alive. (This particular can of milk had been lowered into an open well ELECTION the preceding night.) Inspection meant nothing in those days. annual election of officers The second turkey pool shipment for The There were farmers scrupulously the Westland Grange for the for the fall market made through coming year will be held at the next neat about their barns, whose barn- the Eastern Oregon Turkey Grow- regular meeting on Monday, Novem ers’ association will be made Novem ber 2. Grange Master Floyd Laird yards were filled with enough grav el to keep them from becoming a ber 15th and 16th. Birds will be brought to the growers' warehouse urges all members to be present. mire, who used driven wells, and in Hermiston. Receiving is neces would not tolerate sickly cows. But sary on Sunday in order to reach the markets in time for the Thanks LADIES WILL HONOR these were in a pitiful minority. After all, what did it matter? All giving trade. the milk went into one vat and re- Growers are cautioned not to kill MRS. CLARK tailed for six cents a quart. birds before they are mature since there will be anothr shipment No Veterinarians had been hired to Mrs. H. T. Clark, a past president vember 30th and December 1st. Al do a desultory sort of physical in- o fthe Farm Bureau Ladies Auxil so another shipment two weeks later, This will make three ship- iary, will be honored by its mem spection. If a cow was emaciated, bers at a meeting Friday, Novem she probably had tuberculosis, ana ments before Christmas. ber 6th, in the Columbia park club The largest volume is usually re- house. Mrs. Clark plans to leave the owner was advised to get rid of ceived the first day and growers soon for Washington state. A pot her. If she gave stringy milk, or was are urged to be prompt and on sch luck dinner will be served at : noon a "two-teater," again the owner edule. If this is carried out receiv and all members are urged to be was asked to dispose of her. But, ing will be done only one day and present. due to lack of authority to enforce a half. The ladies will spend some time A total of 1601 dressed turkeys, quilting. All members and friends of disposal, many an imperfect cow totaling 22,546 pounds, were ship Mrs. Clark are especially invited to passed from one neighbor to anoth ped through an early pool held in attend. er, becoming every year more de October. The volume of these birds crepit, until she passed over the were shipped by New Madden and Great Divide, to hamburger sand from the DeMoss flock of 2700 GRANGE CO-OP wiches. birds. These were the only early Then epidemics, which had been birds raised on the project. MEETING attributed to anything from a mani festation of God's displeasure to bad A meeting of the Grange Co-op luck, began to be traced to conta erative will be held in Hermiston, VARIATIONS IN November 7th, to elect one member minated milk. Septic sore throat, to the board, and to vote upon scarlet fever, diphtheria, and ty CREAM TESTS amended by-laws and articles of as phoid fever were laid squarely to sociation. The meeting place will be this cause. Noticeable variations in cream announced in the next issue of the Veterinarians received authority Herald tests from week to week are not to be more insistent upon the dis necessarily indications of errors at posal of suspicious animals. Doctors the creamery or cream station, for WHY MILK IS recognized that milk was an ideal there are almost a dozen reasons medium for the growth of bacteria, right on the farm why the percen SAFE FOR BABIES and inspectors were given increas tage of butterfat will vary. ing powers. Many of the dairymen, For one thing, the milk may ac- at first, were about as cordial to the tually be richer or poorer than a Condensed from The Forum inspectors as a grizzly defending tew days previously, due to a fresh By Guy G. Stevens her cubs, and some of the inspectors cow in the herd, weather changes (From the Readers Digest) overstepped their authority. But the or a change In the length of time Milk used to be cheaper. It has total results justified the methods. between milkings. The condition of not always been subject to the care Ask any mother today if her child- the cream itself may vary the test, ful inspection it gets now. ren have had cholera infantum or for cream skimmed from cold milk "When I was married," Aunt scrofula, and she will look at you will usually test higher than that Martha frequently reminds me, "I in blank amazement. Tuberculosis from milk coming right from the could drop four cents in my agate traceable to milk has been practi- cows, However, there is apt to be pail and set it right there side of cally eliminated. Diseased cows now more butterfat lost in the skim milk my front steps. Fred Green would travel to complete oblivion. if the milk is cold. Sour cream also come driving along and dip me out The creamery of my youth has may test a little higher than sweet a quart, good measure.” been sold out to a big milk corpora cream. This is due to evaporation of "Did Fred wash his hands when tion, and ls now a substantial build part of the water, or may be caused he dropped the reins to fish out the ing with receiving platform and by the fact that it is harder to get pennies and dip you the milk?” I floors of concrete. The interior is a representative sample of sour asked. scrupulously cleaned every day, and cream. “No, of course not. He was a real the windows are properly screened But many of the cream-test varia- man, though.” She gave me a pity No dairyman is allowed to enter — tions may be traced directly to the ing smile. "It’s folks like you. with communications are posted on a bul separator. Accidental changing of ail this inspection stuff, that boost letin outside the door. The workers the cream or skimmed milk screw the price of milk until it’s a wonder have clean uniforms every day. No- while washing will naturally cause that folks can live at all. It's all so body knows when the creamery may a change in the test. Fast turning! much folderal.” be visited by any one of several In of the separator means a higher “What was your oldest boy’s spectors. test, slow turning a lower test, The name?” When the milk cans are being amount of water or skim milk used "l arry—the one who died when steamed the noise is indescribable, to flush the bowl at the finish will he was eight months old?” Steam hisses and sputters. Cans change the test. If the float reg- "Yes. What was the trouble?” clank and men shout. ulating the flow of milk into the ‘ Well, old Doc and us. we laid it It was Saturday. "Hurry up bowl is acting up. the cream test onto that spell of weather. It was so there! Don’t be so dammed fussy. will be affected. If the milk goes in- hot that everybody was tuckered I’ve got five bucks on the ball game to the bowl at a slower rate than ori. A sight of folks died. most of "Say, Bo, that can didn’t go usual, the test will be higher; If it ' them chil dren. Harry was took with through.” goes in too fast the test will be cut. ! cholera infantum, and our little “Aw, what's one can? Let her COLIN KENNEDY. | girl, she was six, got scrofula, all ride!” (Mr. Kennedy is an associate edi-: the same summer.” An inspector happened to be stan- tor of a Mid-western daily market | “You never laid any of that ding on the bridge above, observing newspaper.) Taken from the Coun- trouble to the milk, did you?” them. He telegraphed New York, try Gentleman. "Not to the Fred Green milk.” and there was no milk accepted "Have you noticed that kids don’t from that station for two days. die cf cholera infantum any more?” The local milkman was the last Grange Card Party Aunt Martha tightened iter lips. to receive official attention. For The Stanfield Home ' Economics "We don’t have the hot summers we years it continued to be a man’s own business If he wanted to sell club will sponsor a card party Sat used to have," she stated. Aunt Martha pays 12 cents a milk to his neighbors, but now the urday, October 31, in the Stanfield Grange hall. Bridge, pinochle and quart for her bottled milk, these distribution in even the small towns five hundred will be in play. Hand days, The extra is what her safe- Is closely supervised by the state health authorities. Every distributor made door prizes will be given. The milk insurance costs her. As a boy, I lived on a farm a mile must have a license, and of course public is invited to attend. down from the village where I am every herd is tuberculin tested. now a veterinarian. My chore was to Cow stables are now removed HOW THEY VOTED milk the cows, and later I was em from horses and pigs and hens. All ployed by the local milk station. In wooden floors of stables have been those good old days milk was any- changed to concrete. All manure piles are removed from adjacent The Nation’s Agriculture maga thing that would pass through yards daily. Every cow barn is zine published the following statis cheesecloth strainer. tics which may be of interest, and Barns had rotten wood floors. whitewashed annually. is intended to be non-partisan in Piles of manure leaned against their Each farm is equipped with an formation. sides. Windows were coated with isolated milk house, properly screen "At the order of the Board of Di the dust of years. Horses. chickens ed. Cooling systems are concrete rectors of the American Farm Bur eau Federation, we are publishing and cows shared the same i apart- vats with tight-fitting covers. This herewith for the information of our ments. Barnyards were an unspeak eliminates Nancy’s tin cup and Tris- membership, the voting record of ali able slough in the spring. Wells and sy’s kitten. Milk warmer than 60 senators and representatives on some of the bills of major importance to privies were often in dangerous degrees in summer, and frozen milk agriculture. On a number of import proximity. Aside from watering in winter, are both rejected at the ant agriculture measures in our pro troughs and open wells there were creamery. Refrigerated tank cars gram, there was no record roll call. few milk-cooling systems. carry the milk to the cities, where it In column one appears the vote on The milk station, or creamery, is pasteurized and bottled. the Soil Conservation and Domestic was a drab wooden building, and the The cows are brushed, and their Allotment Bill. S. 3780. In column two the Capper-Jones Amendment wood floors made good nesting plac- udders rinsed off before milking. to the Grain Futures Act to regulate es for barnyard dirt and germs Some farmers fasten the long, swit transactions on commodity exchang brought in on the farmers' boots, es, H. R. 6772. Column three the A lost-and-found department might ching tails by a clothespin to a wire conference report on Tax Bill, H R. strung from the ceiling. Any family 12395. And column four the Kerr well have been established there. Bill consenting to compacts and a- When we looked in the cans we with an Infectious disease cannot greements among states to regulate learned what became of Nancy's tin sell milk as long as the quarantine production of tobacco. H. R. 12037. cup and why Triasy's kitten ceased is in effect. A record of the votes cast by the to appear for morning rations. In short, everything humanly pos Oregon representatives and congres- Creamery employee ceased to be sible Is done to make milk safe for smen appears below. surprised at anything. One fellow. Name 1 babies: snd when all things are lifting the cover of a milk can. McNary. Chas. L. Nay taken Into consideration. J, for one, Steiwer, F............... Nay greeted by the raised head of a live Ekwall. Wm. A. .. PA water snake. I personally caa fur- think safe modern milk is worth the Mott. James W. .. Nay difference In price. Yea Yea nish an affidavit that the snake Pierce, Walter M... Yea SECOND TURKEY POOL SHIPMENT PAGE SEVEN THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 193«. WESTLAND GRANGE I WANT ADS I THREE COWS FOR SALE AND come machinery— Prices reason- Lie; 2 mi. west of Irrigon; go to 182 mi. post, turn north Umi. to Walpole place with red abrn. 8-3tc Notice to the Public. My wife Marie B. Hendrick left my bed and board, without just cause or provocation. June, 1921. 1 wilt not pay any bills or debts in curred by her. Geo. E. Hendrick, Irrigon, Or. Oct. 15-Nov. 5) 50 LEGHORN PULLETS, NOW 13 FOR SALE—TEN-ACRE HOME. & weeks old, 55c each. Inquire Ellis only one mile out. 700 chickens; Feed Store. 10-ltc 2 cows; 5 tons hay; Incubator; Sep- NOTICE OF HEARING UPON LOST — TIRE AND WHEEL FOR arator; Coops for 400 hens; Fruit; FINAL REPORT Chevrolet truck on Butter Creek Alfalfa. Lewis Pearson. Hermiston. highway. E. L. Hooker, Hermiston. 8-3tp IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE _____ 10-ltp STATE OF OREGON FOR UMA ABOUT 35 WEANER PIGS FOR FOR SALE — CHESTER WHITE TILLA COUNTY. sale. See Guy .Cronk. 8-3tp Brood Sow, and 1 work mare. In the matter of the estate of Ern Buck Winters, Hermiston. 10-ltp est K. McCown, deceased. NOTICE OF HEARING UPON APARTMENTS AND ROOMS — NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that FINAL REPORT running water— One small room with stove. Central Rooms, Katiy IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE the undersigned executrix of the last will and testament of Ernest K. Mc Cornered from depot. 10-3tp STATE OF OREGON . FOR Cown, deceased, has filed her final UMATILLA COUNTY. TO TRADE—TWO BLACK GELD- report with the clerk of the above ings; weight between 1400 and 1500 lbs.; age 4 or 6 yrs.; sound; In the Matter of the Estate of George entitled court, and that the judge of said court has designated Friday, broke gentle; to trade for dairy E. Wagner, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that November 20th, 1936, at 10:00 o' heifers, weaning time to 2 yrs. old; Call 5F2 Heppner, or write H. E. the undersigned administratrix of clock a. m , at the rooms of the above Vinson, Lena, Ore. 10-3tp the estate of George E. Wagner, de entitled court in the county court ceased. has filed her final report 15 FINE WOOL EWES FOR SALE— with the Clerk of the above entitled house In Pendleton, Umatilla Coun Emmett Cooney, Hermiston, Ore. Court, and that the Judge of said ty, Oregon, as the place when and 9-3p Court has designated Saturday, the where hearing is to be had thereon. 28th day of November, 1936, at 2:00 All persons interested are hereby no- WANTED—POSITION AS PRACTI- o'clock in the afternoon as the time, tifid to then and there appear and and the rooms of the above entitled cal nurse or housekeeper. Tele court in the County Court House in show cause, if any they have, why phone 561. Hermiston. 9-3tp Pendleton, Umatilla County, Oregon, said report should not be approved, as the place when and where hear NEARLY NEW MC CORMICK- ing is to be had thereon. All per the executrix discharged and the Deering No. 2 Cream Separator sons interested are hereby notified estate closed. Dated this 22nd day of October, for sale. A. G. Pieper. Lexington, to then and there appear and show Ore. 8-3 tp cause, if any they have, why said re 1936. port should not be approved, the ad BETH McCOWN, Executrix. WINTER APPLES FOR SALE— ministratrix discharged, her bonds (Oct. 22-Nov. 19.) Winesaps. Rome Beauties, while men exhonorated and the estate they last. Stamen Winesaps. Bring closed. Dated this 29th day of October, LAND SALE NOTICE boxes. Duane Lathrop, on old Paul 1936. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That Alice E. Wagner, Miller place, 3 mi. N. E. of Her . Administratrix. the undersigned. Sheriff of Uma miston. 8-3tp (Oct. 29-Nov. 26) tilla County, Oregon, by virtue of an order duly made and entered herein by the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Umatilla Coun ty, on the 19th day of October, 1936, will on the 21st day of November, 1936, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon, sell to the highest bid der upon the following terms, to- wit: 20% in cash at the time of sale, balance at the rate of $5.00 per month, all deferred payments to bear interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable annually, at the front door of the Umatilla County Court House in Pendleton, Oregon, subject to a minimum price of 8205.00 therefor, the following de scribed parcels of land. In one lot, heretofore by Umatilla County, Ore gon, acquired for delinquent taxes, to-wlt: He was born and raised in Umatilla County; is 30 SE * of NEU Section 22, Twp. years old ; has been admitted to the bar four years. 5, N. R. 28. EWM. Umatilla County, If elected, he will do his duty faithfully and hon Oregon. estly without any regard to politics. He will dili R. E. GOAD, Sheriff gently work with the sheriff’s office and the police of Umatilla County, Oregon. (Oct. 22-Nov. 19) officers in law enforcement. He will confer and VOTE FOR RALEY PETERSON [A Roosevelt Democrat] Nominated for District Attorney advise with all county officials in regard to the transaction of official business, and will conduct the office with the least expense possible to the tax pay ers. The wealthy and the poor will have the same careful consideration in all matters coming before this office. He favors old age pensions. He will advise the County Court to be liberal in caring for infirm and helpless persons, poor widows with little children and deserted mothers with little children. The church people, and the law-abiding people generally, must have the active co-operation of the District Attorney in law enforcement, in combating crime, and in creating wholesome public morality. Elect Mr. Peterson. Give him a chance to fulfill the duties of the office. He will greatly appreciate each vote cast for him. (Paid Adv.) SYLVANUS SMITH, JR. Attorney-At-Law - Stanfield Oregon FARMERS AUTOMOBILE Inter-INSURANCE Exchange C. A. JACKMAN, Local Agent All Kinds of Auto and Truck Insurance Hermiston - - Oregon DR. A E MARBLE CHIROPRACTOR Office: Two doors west post ottica Oftlcr Hours: 8 to 12 - 1:30 to * Phone 481------- Hermiston, Ore. Hermiston Post No. 37 Meets first and third Thursday. Legion Auxil- meets second and fourth Thursday. Legion Hall. W. L. Morgan, D. M. D. General Dentistry X-Ray and Diagnosis Bank Bldg. Phons 9-3 Residence Phone 25-J Bunday and Evenings by Appointment Dr. A. C. Willcutt OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN & SURGEON OSBORN APARTMENTS PETERSON & PETERSON NATIONAL TICKET For President ALF. M. LANDON For Vice-President FRANK KNOX For U. S. Senator FON CONGRFAS 1st District - JAMESW. MOTT 2nd District-RCY W. RITEER 3rd District-WM. A. EKWALL STATE TICKAT Attorney General — I. H.VAN WONK! E CHARLES L.M.cNARY State Treasurer—RUFUS HOLMAN STATE LEGISLATURE—Senate. REX ELLIS. Representatives. W 8. CAVERHILL and CARL ENGDAHL. COUNTY OFFICERS— CARL W. CHAMBERS. Judge. ROBERT F. WITHERAL, Assessor, E. B. CASTEEL. Clerk. WM. P. GRAHAM. Sheriff. C. K CRANSTON. R. E. BEAN, Commissioner. Justice of the Peace. (Paid for by the Republican State Central Committee.) ATTORNEYS AT LAW U. S. National Bank Building Practice In State A Federal Courts Pendleton, Ore. DR F. B BELT PHYSICIAN A SURGEON Office Hours: Other 10:30 to 12:30 A.M. Hours by 2 to 5 P.M. Appointment Res 712 — PHONE — Office 733 W. J. WARNER Attorney-at-Law Hermiston - Oregon