nonresidents in addition to the regu
lar hunting license fee. A separate
tag must be secured for bull elk,
fee for which is the same as for cow
Let INTERNATIONAL
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Hauling Problems
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PHONE 141
LEWIS & COTTONWOOD
PERMITS TO KILL
ADULT COW ELK
MUCH IN DEMAND
Much Interest is being
by hunters in the order of
commission permitting the
BOO adult cow elk during
expressed
the game
taking of
the regu-
lar bull elk season, October 29 to
November 12, in Morrow, Baker,
Grant, Wallowa, Union and Umatil
la counties. These permits will be
issued in the order the applications
are received and already the game
department has received over 200
applications. The fee for a cow elk
take is 95 for residents and 925 for
GLOBE TROTTING - - By Melville
The antelope season has been ad
vanced to October 6, 7 and 8 and a
total of 600 permits will be Issued
this year to be divided as follows:
300, Lake county; 150, Harney
county; and 150, Malheur county.
These permits will likewise be is
sued to those making application
first, and the fee is 95 for residents
and 925 for nonresidents in addition
to the hunting license.
Permits for 500 antlerless deer
will be issued for the territory im
mediately adjacent to the Mule Deer
game reserve in Lake and Klamath
counties. These permits can be
used any time during the regular
deer season, September 20 to Octo
ber 25. and the fee Is 95 for resi
dents and 925 for nonresidents.
An act passed by the last legisla
ture will likewise permit the taking
of one antlerless as well as one buck
mule deer in a large portion of
Grant county during the open sea
son from September 20 to October
25. A fee of 91 will be charged in
addition to the regular hunting li
cense for taking antlerless deer in
this area, and there will be no limit
as to the number of such permits to
be issued.
Printed copies of the complete
hunting regulations including maps
of the areas covered by the special
orders, will be available about Aug
ust 10.
PINE O H NEWS
By Mrs. Bernice Wattenburger
T his e x h ib it a t the
T ue first locomotive
EXPLOSION IN THE UNITED
STATES OCCURRED IN 1 8 39
ON THE CHARLESTON AND
HAMBURG LINE IN SOUTH
CAROLINA WHEN THE
u
LOCOMOTIVE 'B E S T FRIEND
BLEW UP AFTER THE F IR E
MAN TIED DOWN THE SAFETY
VALVE BECAUSE HE DIDN'T /
LIKE THE HISSING SOUND/
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR
IS A T T R A C T IN G C O N S ID E R
A B L E A T T E N T IO N . I T IS
THE F IR S T F O R D C A R .
B U IL T IN
1896
T he
new
WORLD’S RECORD
FOR OVER-WATER
GLIDER FLIGHTS
WAS SET JUNE 12,1939
BY TED BELLAK,
OF THE HOLY CROSS. IN
OLORADO. GETS ITS NAME
FROM THE SNOW-FILLED
RAVINES WHICH INTERSECT
ON THE SIDE TO FORM
A G IA N T W H IT E CROSS
PAOB « N M
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1939
2 7 YEAR OLD
SAIL-PLANE ENGINEER
WHO SOARED FROM
STURGEON BAY, WIS.
OVER LAKE MICHIGAN
TO FRANKFORT. MICH,
IN 62 MINUTES
GENERAL
Mrs. A. E. Wattenburger is re
covering from an attack of blood
poisoning in her hand. She has been
quite ifl the past week.
Mrs. George Currin and son Ron
ald spent the week end with her sis
ter, Mrs. John Harrison.
A picnic dinner was held Sunday
at the Ray Neill home. Those pres
ent were Mr. and Mrs. W. C. War
ren and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Gerking of Hermiston, Mr. and Mrs.
Dee Neill and family and Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Mathers of Stanfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Bari Wattenburger
and son Freddie spent Saturday eve
ning and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Wattenburger.
Miss Ann O’Sanden returned from
Salem to the Roy Neill home recent
ly where she is employed.
Guy Moore attended a swimming
party in Hermiston one day this
week.
Ray Neill left Tuesday morning
for Wallowa where his sheep are on
the range. He is shipping his lambs
to the eastern market.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mathers are
staying at the Ray Neill home. Mr.
Mathers is helping in the second hay
cutting.
Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Wattenburger
and family were dinner guests at the
Walter Wiggleworth home in Echo
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Marian Finch and
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Ayres and fam
ilies attend Grange at Lena Sunday.
Miss Helen Herley sprained her
ankle recently when she fell between
two board».
ELECTRIC
A P P L IA N C E S
Tw o new 1938 Washing
Machines & several Radios
at greatly reduced prices.
Seed Flax Proves Frost Hardy.
Believe White Animals
Lakeview — Approximately 484
Should Be Held Sacred acres of bison seed flax are being
Among many primitive peoples
white animals of various sorts, al
binos and otherwise, have been en
dowed with supernatural virtues.
The animal selected for this rever
ence is usually one closely associat
ed with the life of the people, like
the elephant in Buddhist countries.
The ordinary bison was the plains
Indians’ source of livelihood. It pro
vided him with food, clothing and
utensils and with the hides for mak
ing tents, recalls a writer In the
Chicago Daily News.
Long before the Indians had guns
and horses, they killed the bison by
driving them into pens, or over the
brink of high embankments. Ac
cording to a story collected from
among the Atsina Indians of Fort
Belknap, the meat and hides of a
herd thus taken was not touched if
a white bison were found in the herd
unless there was great scarcity of
meat in the Indian camp.
Among the Atsina a white bison
which was killed in a buffalo drive
was skinned and the hide turned
over to the keeper of the Turtle
Pipe, a pipe which was said to
possess great supernatural power.
Among the Teton Sioux the white
bison was bielieved to have taken
the form, according to their leg
ends, of a beautiful woman, who
has a benevolent and powerful
spirit.
References by early explorers to
the white bison are few and widely
scattered. It is believed that Juan
Onate, who explored east Texas in
1601, is the first white man to make
mention of the white bison. Onate,
in mentioning the herds of bison he
saw in the country, says that “all
these cattle are of one color—name
ly, brown—and it was a great mar
vel to see a white bull in such a
multitude.’’
Ceylon Once Residence
O f Ousted A d a m and Eve
It the Mohammedans were right,
Adam and Eve, after their expulsion
from Eden, were transported to Cey
lon. Not only did our First Parents
visit Ceylon but Adam also became
a pearl fisherman there, tradition
states. Adam’s peak was named
for him, notes a writer in the Los
Angeles Times.
Ceylon is usually described as the
garden spot of the earth. Half the
size of England, it is shaped like the
pearls found in its oysters.
This land of opalescent light and
deep forests, of high mountains and
great valleys, holds a high place in
legend and story, for it has been an
island of mighty kings.
Anuradhapura, which dates from
400 B. C., was the capital of the en
tire island more than 1,500 years.
Colombo, the capital and main
port of Ceylon, is a city where ev
erything is of the most radiant color.
The houses are white, the earth is
red, the sky is blue. Palms wave
green fronds in all directions, while
on every side flowers bloom In a
vast variety of bright hues. The
city is frequently called a dream of
tropical splendor.
Singhalese women are slender,
shapely and erect in carriage. Some
resemble bronze statues and look as
if they had just stepped off pedes
tals in an art collection. Their fea
tures are more refined than those
of their Malay sisters.
Flour Named for Lecturer
Graham flour, which takes its
name from Sylvester Graham, an
American lecturer on temperance
and food reform, is unsifted or un
bolted wheat flour; that is, flour in
which all the wheat kernel except
the husk is used. Sylvester Graham
was born at Suffield, Conn., in 1794,
and died at Northampton, Mass.,
September 11, 1851. After studying
at Amherst for a time he entered
the Presbyterian ministry in 1826.
As part of his temperance and food
campaign, he not only advocated
total abstinence from meat but also
recommended the eating of bread
made of unbolted wheat flour be
cause of its great nutritive value.
Graham, however, was not the "in
ventor” nor the "introducer” of
this kind of bread, for whole wheat
bread was the first wheat bread
made. His name became associat
ed with it because he included this
article of food in his dietary regi
men.
grown in Lake county this season
by 16 farmers, according to a sum
mary compiled by Vic Johnson,
county agent. William Pfrang, who
has 40 acre« on his farm north of
Lakeview, reports that late spring
frost which damaged certain grain
crops apparently left the flax un
hurt. Other farmers also report
that the crop appeare to be very
frost resistant.
UMATILLA NEWS
By Mrs. Glenn Ostrom
Mrs. Elmore McKenzie and daugh
ter Betty, Mrs. Raymond McNabb
and Mrs. Glenn Ostrom drove to Pen
dleton Wednesday afternoon where
they spent the day shopping. Mias
Betty returned to her duties as a
student nurse in the St. Anthony's
hospital in Pendleton after a two
weeks’ vacation at the home of her
parents.
John Mustard spent last Thurs
day in Spokane on business.
Mrs. James Byrnes and daughters
Joan and Mrs. V. D. Bramer and son
Jim and infant daughter Stella Rae
returned home Friday from Port
land. Joan and Jim had spent some
time visiting their sister and aunt,
Mrs. Paul Walsh in The Dalles.
Patsy and Merlyn Mohoney of Se
attle, who have been visiting their
grandparents in Pendleton, are now
at the home of the other grandpar
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Springer, in
Umatilla.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Tucker and son
Joe and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ostrom
spent Saturday afternoon in Pendle
ton and fishing on the Umatilla ri
ver above Mission.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Leach of Irri
gon have moved into the Del Jack-
son house In town. Mr. Leach is
employed here.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Estepp and
children of Sunnyside spent the week
end here visiting. Peerry Pike, Mrs.
Estepp’s father, returned home with
them after spending a couple of
weeks at the home of his daughter.
Miss Margaret Brown left Sunday
for Boise where she will visit her
parents. Miss Brown is taking a
two weeks’ vacation from her duties
as clerk in the Red & White store.
Margie Mustard is working for Miss
Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Peterson of
Sunnyside spent Sunday visiting at
the Bill Conlon home. The Peter
sons formerly lived here.
Mr. and Mrs. Horn of Fossil have
spent the past week visiting at the
home of their daughter and son-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cherry.
Mrs. Ben Spencer left the last of
the week for Eugene where she will
• Full dimensioni Made
I < 5 7 of w ear-ros/srio^ rubber W
~ ^ - l for long mileage! See ne t e
about Goodrich CO M M AN DER S
while the savings are big.
™
ePriceeeabject to chonge without notice
G oodrich
C om m anders
Connor’s A uto
Repair Shop
Hermiston, Oregon
visit her sister, Mrs. Frank Morgan
and infant daughter. She will also
visit her own daughter who has been
attending summer school there.
Mrs. Effie Jarvis has as her guest*
Mr. and Mrs. Peterson who were old
time residents of Umatilla.
Earl Hanna, Texaco agent at Pen
dleton. was a Monday business visit
or here.
Bob Brownell, -who has been at
tending Kinman Business College in
Spokane, has finished his course and
is visiting at the home of his par
ents.
BUYER MEETS
r □ r I - | L L I L rn
ad
.
in
in our
columns
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the careful
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Non 3 1 1 ........................................ Hmiitii
Not Buried in Standing Position
The former premier of France,
Georges Clemenceau, said in his
will: “Let me be carried in the
silence of daybreak to my Vendeean
forest and there beside the coffin of
my father let mine be placed up
right as his was. Even in death I
wish to remain standing.” As far
as possible his wishes were carried
out. The funeral cortege traveled
by vehicle the 250 miles from Paris
to Vendee. The coffin, however,
was placed horizontally as it was
found that there was a solid rock
formation which prevented an up
right position.
Dumb Walter English Invention
Dumb waiters were an English in
vention of the Eighteenth century
and consisted of tiers or trays af
fixed to a central support on a tri
pod base. They were usually placed
diagonally at the corners of the
dining table so that dinars might
help themselves after the servants
had departed. One of Chippendale's
early bills mentions "two mahogany
dumb waiter« oa »a «ears” «Meh
automatic drainhoard.
BEST VALUE IN YEANS—COME IN TODAYI
Round Tub
$ 6 4 50
Square Tub
$119*5°
MOR TONE SO IN I SERVICE
Phone 121
9
Hermiston, Oregon
— EASY TERMS —