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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1922)
I^VWW W W W W EATS ENOUGH FOR FOUR MEN w v FOR MANY MILES AROUND This report covers a period o f 81 days from October 1 to the 81 incus- ive. O f this time two days were spent in the field returning from the state fair. Eight days were spent in the returning exhibits from the County and State fairs; getting in Final Reports and talking over the various proects for the next year w ork; selecting or rather helping to select corn for the Portland Land Show. Three days were spent with the Judging team in preparation for the Contest at the Pacific Interna tional Livestock Exposition. Nine days were spent in going to and from and attending the Annual con ference o f Extension Workers, in Corvallis. While in the field 50 personal visits were made, 3 club meetings were held with an attendance o f 10 members, 1 meeting with the execu tive com mittee o f the Farm Bureau six members present. A talk was given to the teachers present at the Malheur County Teachers Institute. There 150 teachers present.. A fter the talk Mrs. W. L. Turner’s S<w- ing Club gave a demonstration m the form o f a play. The girls dem onstrated the various things that they had learned in club work in the past year. A fter the demonstra B ecause o f ur La th is in stitu tion is dreds o f indi n 'î l # m iles. B a n k in g -b j-m a il is venient and r ser som e o f o u r dep< 1 bank. T h ey i io> vice rendere' ro .»O P E t teCHOl c h ii ; ;rfruN> ! I; com ; MétÜí ur C jFinty Bank N Y S i 4, O k E G O N you Capital Surplue W W VW W * THE HOM E RADIO H o w to M a k e a n d U se I t B,<A^ä,XfXLY,^^!LL VIII. MORE ABOUT AERIALS ‘lepliqjv ■any ^ ^rmei-Ä ! nllt, j) pen 5) les. nluit; iatlnii|>) c o ils ' ussiigi; ent S oil niji need g irodmsi lag'll* S ng, I® f’ueeil g •nn in.* ieaie S -hanii g n nil ^ If there are several send’ ng stnfons | telegraphic spark signals from some i at various points from you.- set, it is station and yet, merely by altering often a very good plan to i on several the direction o f their aerial or the po aerial wires at right angles or radiat sition o f the lead-in they could hear ing as shown ln figures 11 aDd 12, "on everything perfectly. So you see a nectlng them together and running the g-eat deal may depend upon the simple lead-in from the point where all Join, aerial, even if It consists o f only a as shown. Sometimes this principle single wire. On the other hand, many I may be reversed and several lerd-lns amateurs have obtained splendid re i may be carried from ti e < 'ter cuds sults with a wire run around the walls o f the radiating aerials id Joined o f a room near the celling; a wire to form u single leud-ln and will bring run through a h allw ay; a wire dropped , even better results, figure- 13 and 14. down an nlr-shaft or elevator-shaft, ¡T h ese several lead Ins - ty he con or even from an Iron bedstead or bed nected by means of an anchor-ring, spring. It all depends so much upon figure 15, to equalize t’ 'e wavi oi local and climatic conditions, sur currents, or they iay be provided roundings and other conditions that with multiple point switches ns shown no hard and fast rules can be made, In Figs. 13 and 14. This switch ar hnt despite all this, nine times out of rangement has the great . Ivantagi ten, a high aerial, well above surround- that you can largely cut out sta-lonr teg buildings and from 100 to 150 feet you do not wish to hear by uglr« the long, will give the best lesults. But lead-in towards the st.itlon you dealt* r-member that If there are elevated to henr. This will result, n -he other i . icks, steel bridges, trolley lines, elee- rtc wires or steel structures near, you being fainter or weaker In coinpa Iso end they can there;ore be morn offec- | should run your aerial at right angles to them In order to avoid failure through leakage or Inductance. — Yo u must also bear / \ ln mind that t h e fj “ground” Is almost as \ Important as the aerial, J for without a good / ground the set will not work. A water, steam, or gas pipe will usual ly make on excellent V. ground, but before us- / ' Ing It be sure there la no Insulated Joint be- tween the connection of your wires and the earth or that the pipe does not enter an earth- 7 * en or tile pipe n ew the ground or ln the cellar. In making the Z S 7 3 .. ground c o n n e c t i o n , 3— "L_r— B scrape the pipe clean ------- iJ and bright nnd solder Ha. it r — I " f' i i<r M the wire to It. I f this Is not possible, wind the tually tuned out by voi riiuments. " unectlon with tln-foll nnd fine wire Aerials are moat pocu.i. ; affair ind and wrap It with adhesive tupe. Where u little experimenting v” i enable y< i no pipe Is available carry the ground to determine the best s'ze, heigh.- and wire to a sheet o f copper, an old cop type to use. It is v I inv that per boiler or a copper tank or basin wlrelesR wnves are dlr> , . or o t l- filed with charcoal and burled at least er words, that they travel more » ug- five feet under the surface o f the ly In one direction away frrm tin *.-nd- earth. A lightning rod or fire escape Ing nerlal than ln other* and vhlle will sometimes make a very good this has been largely obviated li. l o- ground. Hut It is not so much what to-date stations, yet tbi T d W 7 le- you use for a ground as how good reiving aerial Is din tl.e and will the connections are and how well the get stronger slgunls f the lead-in Is object Is grounded. D o not use an 'ectric light or telephone, telegraph or door bell wire for a ground. To re peat, be careful of your connections end sure o f your grounding. Probably Largest Human Consumar of Food In tha World Threatana ta Afflict Russia. Highly Interesting Is the coincidence that the largest • human consumer of food in the world should be a Russian, and, though at present outside that distressed country, he Is announced as anxious to return to it In order to go to work on his father's farm. Nature has a queer hubit o f displaying ex tremes simultaneously as If to Jest with the observer. The giant, Kazanloff by name, Is described in the Journal of the Amer ican Medical Association as being nine feet three Inches tall and weighing 436 pounds, his proportion* being sym metrical. Pour meals a day are need ed to stoke this physical engine, hun ger being his governing emotion. In 24 hours he will consume from four to five pints of mill;, from fifteen to twen ty eggs, four pounds of meat, five or six loaves o f bread anil large quanti ties o f potatoes, beans and other vege tables, washing down this Gargantuan repast with from four to six pints o f wine and eight to twelve pints of beer. Tired of the monotonous life o f a circus freak, this man mountain longs tor his native Siberia, whore his fa ther Is a farmer In moderate circum stances, and soon will leave Hungary for his home. The hope Is piously ex pressed that famine conditions are not prevalent at his destination, for the reason thnt, as he needs the quantity of food that will feed four average healthy men, he will be four times us hungry as his neighbors and therefore will become a menace to himself end the community. — Cincinnati En quirer. AIDS CHILDREN IN HOPPING fo r the Annual Report. While in Pennsylvania Woman Has Put For ward Ingenious Device Which She the o ffice 7 personal letters were Calls Grasshopper Feet. written, 8 telephone calls were ans w ered; 2 articles for the press were Adult human beings are rarely seen w ritten; 1 circular letter with 200 to si,-ip nnd hop. It Is, however, a copies m ailed; 1 questionaire ans form o f exercise ln which children wered and 3 o ffice calls attended to. ire wont much to Indulge, to the The time this month was spent on great benefit of their physical devel tw o projects, mainley, Corn and the opment. Encouragement of this form Stock Judging. The other projects oi exercise Is offered by the novel In were visited but as m ost o f them vention o f a woman, Slay O. South- gate of New York. It Is a pair of have com pleted the work fo r the past mechanical grasshoppers, o f giant year the time was spent where it ilze, put on like a pair of shoes and was m ost needed. fastened by straps and buckles to the Stock Judging. child’s feet. They have legs o f spring Three days were spent with the •it eel, terminating In rings which hold Judging Team in preparation fo r the rubber feet. A child equipped with contest at Portland next week. The these grasshoppers can hop, skip or boys worked on the stock ot the lump much more actively, and can get over ground quicker, while the rub W eiser Institute and all o f the sur ber feet lessen the shock of alight rounding farm s where any purebred ing and give a delightful sense of stock was found. lightness.— Philadelphia Ledger. Corn Club Both the upper and low er Big Gold Film Is Transparent. Bend corn clubs were visited to get Gold 1-2.798,000 o f an Inch thick, or corn to send to the land show in 10,584 times thinner than the ordi Portland. Each m em ber entered nary sheet o f printing paper has re ten ears o f corn. The com petition cently been produced. One grain of ‘ he precious metal o f this thickness there is between the three states, overs nearly four square feet o f area W ashington, O regon and Idaho. nd Is perfectly transparent. Sew ing Club The process o f obtaining the thin The three girls scoring highest in nest film is to cut a sheet o f copper sew ing at the county fa ir sent ther to a determined size and place It ln exhibits to the show at Portland also an electric bath, where sufficient gold Doris Lees o f Bonita in Division 1, Is deposited on one surface o f the Violet Lees o f Bonita in Division 2 i plate, to produce the finest gold color discernible. To separate the film o l and Katherine Boswell o f Vale in gold from the copper, the gold-plated Division 3. Miss Cow gill, assist copper strip Is Immersed ln a weak ant club leader w ill have charge o f I solution o f nitric acid for several the exhibit at Portland. dnys. The copper Is entirely dissolved, leaving the film o f gold floating on the surface o f the liquid. The film Is then collected on a glnss plate.— Popu PROVIDE PLENTY OF WATER lar Science Monthly. Cows Mutt Have Abundant Supply in Summer and Winter for Profit able Milk Production. KEEP MILK AND CREAM COOL Convincing Argument. A counsel for the defense once got the belter, o f Judge Bramwell. He requested icnve to address the Jury ln Welsh, o f which Bramwell was Ignorant. It was a simple case, nnd permission was given. Counsel said only a few words, and the judge left the decision to lhe jury with little comment from him. He was, however, startled at the prompt verdict o f ac quittal. "W hat was It,” he Inquired after ward, “ that the learned counsel said to the ju ry?" “Oh,” was the reply, "h e just said, This case, gentlemen, lies In a nut shell. You see yourselves exactly how It stands. The judge is an English man, the prosecuting counsel is an Englishman, the complainant Is an Englishman. But you are Welsh, I aui Welsh, and the prisoner Is Welsh. Need I say more? I leave It to you.’ " --London Tlt-Btts. Product Will Soon Sour on Warm Spring Days Unless Promptly Placed in Tank. A Cast See a Allv-ninuTub D e a io n s tr tio n You, Teo, W ill Marvel EDER HARDWARE COMPANY BONITA Visitors’ day was observed at the Wheaton Creek school house on Nov. 1st. A program o f 12 numbers was given by the eleven pupils under the direction o f their teacher, Mrs. Oliver Sandy, those to enjoy the program being B. E. Himler and w ife, Mrs. Geo. Lees, Mrs. Elmer Corder, Oliver Sandy and A. Smith. A Thanksgiving program and dance will be given at the Wheaton Creek school house on the evening o f Nov. 24th. The ladies are all asked to bring supper. The pro- gan on Saturday with his winter supply o f potatoes and apples. Blaine Spaulding came after wheat at Carder’s ranch on Saturday. Pupils to be neither absent nor tardy fo r the month ending Nov. 3 were Gorman Smith, Mae Rowley, Jack and Mildred Himler, Mabel, Doris and Elwood Lees, James, Mary and Cora Lewellen. Elwood Lees returned from Port land on October 31. He entered school Nov. 1. Elwood is in the seventh grade and is very much in terested in school, as he walked seven miles so as to start school on November 1. Little Jack Himler and his sister Mildred had the misfortune to fall o ff while riding their horses on Saturday. They were not seriously hurt, Jack being bruised on the left jaw and left shoulder while Mildred was hurt in the back. Both children expect to be back in school in a few day9. Mrs. Geo. Lees and daughter Mabel and Mrs. Oliver Sandy called Satruday afternoon to see Jack and Mildred Himler. Ed Paine, who came up from W estfall after a load o f wood, stop ped with Lees on Friday night. Joe Mullen went to Westfall one- day last week after his winter sup plies. Am os Roethler was in the vicinity Saturday. He is pasturing hi: sheep at the Lees and Simonson ranch. Oliver Sandy and wife were sup per gm «ta at Mr. and Mrs. Elm Corder’s home on Sunday, Nov. 5. Elwood, Doris and Mabel Lee Visited Harold Mildred and Jack H im ler on Sunday. We understand Abe Lewellen has Tented the Howard ranch near Bro gan. He has been moving down this week. E. Bush was at his ranch or. Clover Creek November 5. He took back machinery and grain to his ranch on Bully Creek. On hi.; way back he called at Corder’s ranch. Clara Schultz left October 30 to spend the winter above Lockhcart, where her father and brothers wit trap this winter. Jake and Reese Schultz left foi Vale Novem ber 1. They took dow: a great many furs and will brin; back w inter supplies. LIARSIPRETTY WELL MATCHED Amorknn Evidently Found Foema W orthy of His Steel, In Old English Farmer. An American poultry farmer went over to England to have a look round the poultry farms there and see where the farmers were making mlstukes. Ha did not hesitate to tJll how far advanced was the art o f poultry k ey ing In America, and spun several very tall ya m s on that subject Twenty chickens from twelve eg, s appeared to be an everyday occur, renoe in the United States, If the stories he told could be believed. But a bluff old English fanner wn* not unduly Impressed. “ Happen, malster.” said the oil man, "y e have never seen as many as a hundred chickens hatched by one hen at n setting?” “ Waal,” answered the American. • i can ’t say that I have, but— “ “ Well, then, listen here, malster; 1 have," returned the farmer. “ Down Ipswich way we allns fill a barrel with eggs nnd set the old hen on the bung h ole I"— Houston P o s t Have you ever thought you couldn't prove it? A checking account will do uwu assurance o f sa fety, there is a n count and a little added prestige you. A checking account is only one bank U ready to give you. Conn ask about them. BAN K OF NYSSA H. W alters, President. Dick Tensen, V ice President, ADVERTISING FARM PRODUCTS ta.w tqqojt ppcjU* City A lm en Ha» Monopoly. A M »t*ni «»f Vfkt* «limi (UttiikK hi I lit* t 9tMtts In N«w YorkJ Mnchin ■■ A machine h means o f v,hit ’ duce sea air In city. It la h In ment of varions T. i s o v n r u , r e « Fan Ceu &««•»» i . - Two Boon f’ ow,rtU| Urf* mo« i-owerfnu : r Sc brie l"u from t|ie ^ ■ui flihiTnm O m " " "berate In " ‘ »y- A strange, n,,“ > would »on | 'Miess IWUe ■'■out la the '■'. vn through the h ln lu« than a **, h’lhe.» become Ip !illve 1° be kept do " Prevent Hr,.- < illume. Horse Is Prt.,% Evelyn Is onk (* , admit she Is -real # her grandmother tries say “dank* school." good effort with her j and managed this: n few days later an „ pse the expression. | a few moments and rather free render*) German: “Horse dm First Farn J “ A Bokt of llnrfaJ to In- (lie first huokinj In England conatij-J c< ntly for a xum «¡aid on behalf of the M Sotheby's siilrxrooim.i small that It could ill the fiocket, was prtsj one Ith liard I’ying, j] by Kir Anthony FikW bury Derbyshire, and hi com í;üon. though colondi Is h.,;:nd In atorocen “C cap There is rcKusii# jl ninny • < -or,- us to the( tween coco, coca cann Tile original spelling o( 1 beverage, “ctuao" Mi Is In German, Spanish all England and Amertais^ I; Is ;):■> thcflln him na lilts chi relate drink 1 native of South Amerial piaiitei! In all psrWrft Wage War on.«I ^mong the If!) ilifim bacteria and tatii-; «.* from the bodies of hoiNl ent 1 n vest I gu tor» ur« t rhoeu, typhoid fever, u poisoning, amoebic i;i Experiments Have Shown I si esses, leprosy, H|K* Northern Countries a Cc worms, bubonic plague, a Amount Is Essential. summer complaint, Ufa Aoeordhi] to common belief, cold tei ltls, trachoma, eryi- weather causes plants to become dor- grene. stomach wnn.;s, a ophthalmia. "iin during the fall, while warm Z Z , . 'r ,:,e « ‘ «-•ceding spring again ' - new growth. Intensive lnves- „ fh“ i‘ " n,8 |lr- Frederick V. Covllle o f the pop:-, was a , ‘ ."¡'-‘J ” 1 department o f Agricul- much like iimse la *1-3 ’ ^ lmve been conducted over Venice are so often re i ' " t, n years, and which huve pictures. It was first a Pope Nicholas T, In " - I lemon , T * 7 Ph" 8e of thl* subject, S T ! ',at ,>oth of "le se tra- the first coronet was «W uu'-u v i tlleorles llre erroneous. Dor- ter o f uncertainty, tat,ffl m our nnt,ve trees and shrubs placed by Pope I>nnlfv*1 r t S t T * ' me before the start o f anil the third by Pope I* cold weather each winter; the annear- 1308. A New V«: A ludicrous distort; occurred not lung tv- school when a stnall the Pharisees : “TIi*' mean, measly lot. 6 them gave mir Lord « Lord held It out In Ms at It with scorn mil » Bcrlptlon Is this?" Fighting Wi ln sections of die fruit growers cover I roofing paper, cntttnf1 for the melon hills, fi that by this pmcHm smothered and liiere I In labor for cultivation In 1776. “ ,h<* uniform f „ r ■v’T'S. by order of ’ * ‘““e " dated So» ‘ ¿ r*ea “Cot faced * slashed sleeves " « « “ os round th< back, buttons to b ,e wal8tc„at and W rtl w ° rdcV Is‘’ v c«n r ere or<1ered an b« Procured. Daily Thoujk'" It takes a long time 1°' ■enee to maturity.— J* Plemi n)?, M in ister. SUNDAY SERVICES. ^ KEKl)AY MEETINGS. e T in g -niitq -0ufui«u«ee en r*t C.M¡ NYSSA, 1 lle Timely Advice. Brown had attended an auction sale of furniture and antiques and had bought a grandfather clock. As warm weather approaches, hot A fter the sale he looked round for ¿DAIRY COWS WORK HARDEST ter care must be taken o f the milk someone to carry his purchases back and cream. The can o f cream must to hlg house, but, alas I he could find Animals Give From Five to Ten Time« be put Into a cooling tank Into os cold nobody. Their Weight In Milk— Need water ns possible to keep the crenm Beat o f Feed. 8o at last, in despair, he decided cold. Unless milk and cream Is cooled to be h k own beast o f burden. After promptly and well It will sour during some difficulty he managed to strap :’ People seldom think o f the dairy the warm spring days. his cloak onto his back, and trudged '•cow as a hard working animal, yel It Is a fact that she works harder tlim off toward home. Every year PLANT CROPS FOR COW FEED A burly navvy happened to come i oth er domestic animals. she gives from five to ten times her i-onnd the com er rather abruptly, and weight In milk, containing as much Animals Will Not Prova Profitable Un a collision resulted. actaal dry matter as do the bodies less Properly Fed— Ensilage end “Pm sorry," gasped Brown. of tw o or three steers. It requires Alfalfa Urged. “ So am I,” said the navvy, rising from the gutter. “ I f you can’t blow Dnlry cows are not profitable un yer ’« m why don’t yon buy a wrist- less fed properly. Ensilage and slfnl- watch?” —London Tit-Bits. fn hay are the host cow feeds. The enues, knlflrs, darso, feterita nnd com Just Matter of Zaros. nre good row crops for the * silo. If T.vo French workmen were talking alfalfa cannot he grown, cow pens, soy henna or peanuts are leguminous at a public bar. O f course, since they were not talking about horse racing, cm*, to *,!ant for dairy oow feeds. Ihev were talking about politics. 4pW O Stipo jeptra *prno.m qaiq* jr-vj “ The various nntlonal debts go up V in n e B iw » q j — „ i jo q o j kupi jn sism n jjp (unsnun jsom aqj j.q, talc trillions >f francs,” declared one, -a|3eq k.eqg ’MB stp m o jj seq jeJ -on jj aspe o ) »iqiseod q epura suq j| ultli the air o f a man who Is saying o) jo* »AJ jnq., ’i|*OtJSejojd ’/q q o n toiodpams lUJimpel pun piujunimi ■ lethlng a ste n d in g . xn raojj ejun.Hi;u f i iseiwuff .»ql q Pl«d ,.1ou m x . .. JqqoH ‘Xwpt sno.f The other didn't Mink. snqdtne jo jo|Aui|oq jRqn.wd sjqj, -so* jjn q jou jsntn ipeeodseja; Jeqjora " i 'i . * n . I .-ay.” thundered the ■HI 'IJJueq eq j mojj fv mw XjqAnoj e Oim powevnoo .f|i»'ni s| pmt njnn* rat. “ Do y<*u i i)w what a trillion 81|em ’Pilon x»oio.>*>«| mm -mciklru jeq I 'XSarp pu* n*1 *«D f q zsq p->. .*s m u r a « la g n iti e q i w o u j . i i i i tu n n u M il ' > > A|ueppns ueqj 'etjq*HU aej eon **u jeq . I d his friend, “ the «i]l -uir ¡-.«MiMt« » Iiit|r,«| eqi y in pozu* v'qqofi 'i|pno| jjn<: oi un* a hiilioti, «nij* a lot m ofo f i g Z i i i -u f . u ■ ’, eu ini|*l|Hs M*|P.I -eq /ddm j nennt* *juo »MX itMiu«v> : M pad ut e.'v|dAjg aqi .xii'jaq "«.» spi -, u |?; ojjs paid P IM P R O B A B L E ISESSMENTS A ISE BOUND M IL LA G E »R CO U N TY. i drop o f 11 per cent in the estim ated tax- id fo r general county, Btate purposes in Mal- | fo r next year, accord- estim ated budget which lisped in the Enterprise •This drop in dollars and Ps to $46,790.99. las made by the budget I miscellaneous expenses r which the county has |su expenses were pared knd then cut some more, L500 is asked fo r these jluding $60,000 fo r road me 1922 budget called i0 fo r these items. H expenses o f the var- io ffice s will increase a feir. This is natural, as [business o f any county »cre a se the expenses o f (B u t this increase in the county offices is k fset by the estimated Be county other than kf which com e from a fferen t o ffices. These Iceipts are placed at l i e the budget fo r this ■ but the sum o f $47,- Inted receipts. ■ b iggest item o f ex- fcounty is the state tax B ated at $160,000 by la r d . But there is no It may be. The county B every thing possible H justm ent o f the ratio Ith c state tax com m is- b Malheur county ass- * d e r to get the exhor- | x o f this county re- ling this apparent [ amount o f money to the taxpayers o f the fcannot be expected to they were this year 6s o f property as, is ther article on this [assessed valuation of | taken a tremendous t year. A s the dol- lof taxes to be raised ftior.ed to the dollars teessed valuation it is [the m illage f o r the [higher next year. lust Be Kept. —-Clyde G. Huntley, *rnal revenue, calk f taxpayers to the the provisions of a decision every indi- t on the business of ufacturing, purcahs- any commodities or cept the business of fling products of the he purpose o f deetr- Unt of income under ! of 1921, keep such s of account or re inventories, as are kblish the amount of id deductions, credits Imation required by ? required books of tail be produced for if revenue officers iw to inspect the Hnntley says tax- y simplify the task he ir income tax re current year. CO UNTY TEAM JUDGING GOOD. ¡which won a prize hrestock exposition fork on the part of Id Weber made the Ih* three but they par the top mark, visions of judging pollow s: e-Short horn, 85; H. wool sheep, 85; ■>, 55; Jerseys, 85; ■lacings, 85; rea- F '; tout. 875 . -e The Mg. «vli*ri-«''H 'ei fun i>ta *■* the top o f the II« -lieft o f » it ijtI * fo r v en tilatili* the rn'i-t: I.« smn«^l d esign ed fur M im in g a.r Into the m •nd som etim es fo r d raw ing It o a L YOUNG COMMU AL Thin Fr ‘¿ S SOCIA WNNF.R A - i. .ne««. 'i « occupied and *v‘. according to researches have * o f incense bura- iinc leggetl diahm comi fa r à o ff üthe tion trade ent fc ments other percef a rais they lands were 1 and i creases town a land m fum itu Mrs. spent tl ing an Nampa. L a k e to tives. J. T. three co’ N yssa F Sunday \ fam ily oi W alter helping with his pects to t ranch nea Rev. Bh pointment P. I. Sj G eorge PI this vicini buy Sunda Helen Cl were out c week. Elbert went to Be week end v John Hui weekend in Miss Betl end in Bois H arry Haze The Rebe) ed Mrs. Skii ing, it beta brance, as sh husband, left her home th* Miss Blisi Vaughn and Kakebeke anc Boise Saturdi ball game bet A carload a Ham Brown shipped to tl was o f prime ed to bring I stalks. Mrs. H. M. was visiting George Schwei Clement will li fo r Seattle to H arry Clement on the rup fi