Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Weston leader. (Weston, Umatilla County, Or.) 189?-1946 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1916)
.a- i i a-tw " laiidu acuum leaner $5.75 The modern Improved hand vacuum cleaner or gweeper In nA'"r' fully effective, a marvellous lima mid labor eaver. It sucks up tha dirt instead of arstterliig. It, will draw dirt mid grit through I ha heaviest eerpet T ruf-thalre why irl.hral hoiiseeleiiiilnn; l a vlng way lo rem. llliuoua houae cleaning! II It la work each week keeps the carpets mid span, olvan through mid through. We made large woirsct f..r on of the bast itinkw, on j thought enough to have our name put on It. mid yet we are selling; this Aim swseiwr 7-r only 11.71. Now, dtm'l think It cmi't U good fur Hint . It la food. ItlsesecHy the asms as mi imiw being sold under an other name by tanveaeeri at f 13.60. It haa three powerful auction 11 low, haa fibra bearings, has adjust abla revolving brush to gather up lint, elr., haa effective easily edjuat ad metals with easy applying dual beg and duel pane, la mada low to go Under furniture, etc.. rune but liUls harilsr and weighs but llUle more than an ordinary carpet sweeper. Vou will be pleased with ths Pevla. Kaaar'a 8paclalKwar at tk.71. Try one thirty clays at our risk mnney refunded without question If deelred. Sent poet paid at our special price of MJe. THE DAVIS-HASER CO. , Complete runilahora of llomaa, Offices, Churches, Schools. rt(. . I'lsnoe, honrapha. Music. I04M likWr Yt, - ' (Odd KalUiwa" Temple) - WALLA WALLA. WASH. BREVITIES Dr. Alfred F.Sempert Graduate and Registered DENTIST omcB hours 9:00 to 12.00 A. M. lOO to BOOT. M. WATTS BUHL, Utalra It's True Economy TO TRADK AT TIls Economy Slots Wa boy for raah ami all for eaah-at amall margin. GROCERIES Crash and Linen Goods NOTIONS School Supplies r phonb no. m ALMA BARNETT Ride with me at train prices. JO. Wood. Fred nupula caught tha limit on a n.hino irio Sunday to ttia north fork of the Walla, Walla rler. Ralph and Grenadine Larson of Walla Walla have been visiting Ihalr grandparenta, Mr. and Mrs. O. Ia Uraw. Vha two dauchtara and aoa of U H. I)owd. who have own allandlna' -M'anvllla follaga. raturnad home laat weak fr vacation. i i... v.i.a atudrnt from Mtllon, i... i..n hnnnrad by an appolntmant aa rolonl for neat yaar of lha real- mant of O. A. C. ceoeu. ' i.f hnox :t nonla who will apand alx bile for aaaollne or railroad fare . ......... . i...liit barcaln." aaya Kar. nal Wyd In hie -Mulligan ew- I Mr. Wm. MacKenale and Will, rharMIe and laaballe MaKenaie have ona to Haaltla for a Yieu win her dauHtr. Mra. Anaa Prantlaa. WUh hie trueljr ahoiaun ' Charlaa Price put a eudden and aanunary end Hunday to a lra porcupine whlrh wae raiding hla poultry yard. , Waaton alrawrrl ware brought Into the loral market Saturday for tha flret lime thla evaeon. The growere ware t--hrla Thoeny and w. M. ivia. Mr. and Mra. Frank Oraham and Mr. and Mm. Robert Proudflt and daughter will laaae naat Monday tor aummar vaiatlon at Bingham Springe. Mr. and Mra. J It Prlr of thla city and Mra. 'ore Wmpaon of Walla Wal la motorad to Waahtucna. Wah.. Mon day for a visit with Mra. Blmpaon'a daughter, Mra. Will Roae. ' Walter Raybum. Miller Rayburn and Ma Nail, who attend the Wee ton upland arhool. were among the t'matilla couniy puplla who paaeed the Juno eighth grade eaamlnatlona. Herman fVHarrn, who la takln the enuree In agricultural chemlatry at k. .-..n Aarieuliural Colleca. came , up Saturday from Corvallla to apand h. vartlon at hla home. He will be In tha Junior chue next year. I IlT. and Mra. W. A. Phelpa have arrived In Weaton from Mountain Home. Idaho, and have taken up tbelr realdance In the Called Brethren pa turage. Mr, Phelpa preached hla flret eermon to a Weaton congregation laat Sunday evening, and made a very favorable Impreaalon. , , ! win rrt innk hla oalnt bruahea to D P WOOD the Peed Mail the country Monday to apply suitable K W ' (coloring to George Wlnn a new barn. a eommodloua etructure ree in elxe, with a circle root. Oeorge, who known a thing or two about carpentry himwl. waa hla own auperlntendenl of conetructlon. The Athena Preaa toaewi the fol lowing bouquet over the hill: "Wee ton'a new band, which had been prac ticing but eight weeka prior to the ploneere reunion, made a eplendld lm prewlon upon all who heard It la the Important part It took In the program on both daya of the picnic. Profeaaor Lundcll haa an Inatrumenutlon of 10 plecea. which la eapcdally atrong lu the reed net-lion.? Nature's Food for horaea and cattle la tha craaa that awaMaaargi nt IrtMl l.. ami hill, l'ha next Ul thlna; la aweet, clean, hay and fed that cornea (runt our mill. ben you Maori rolled train of the right art for kecplitir your livratock In finn fet tle. Imdi f'r our aiR" '' 'ha gf' thing fr for your dumb aervanta atored In our Miw. Wa hMmlla Rlcam ItolM Harlov, Onta and Wheal; Haled llav, Mlllalu'lTa and Chicken Keed. We're local agenta for I'oroek Flour and lllatchford'a C-aJf Meal. I'hoiio 281. DR. C. H. SMITH Physician and Surgeon Onire III Watt bulMlna; WlittrON OK WHIN ewTgThughes Dentist . .. . .i ..ii.n.. nti.. kjUmc in Itie r.imii '"" llanc. W to 12 and I to S FOR COOL SUMMER MATERIALS WASH FABRICS Dainty and cool 12c and 15c lawns specially priced at 9 1-2 cents. All wash goods for merly priced up to 23c, this week for only 16 cents MEN'S SPORT SHI RTS The season's best, in stripes or plain, 1.50-1.25 98 cents MIDDIES A splendid assortment. Assorted patterns and white for children and ladies, $1.49-1.19-98c-73c, and 49 cents WHITE SHOES Pumps, oxfords, rub ber and leather soles, $1.48-1.69 and hoes 1-2 Piicc Broken lots from our entire stock and good values at regular prices when you consider the constant ad vances in shoe leather. Bargains in this lot for men, women and children. . 300 pairs Men's Harvest Shoes, good wearers; 61 40 regular $1.98 values; to close out at. ..; T Weston in ercantile W. If. Kendall, the foreet ranger who bad bean eupervlalng the con- atructlon of the government telephone line whlrh la being built from the ranger etatloa to Weaton, waa eerluua- ly hurt by a fall frlday. Mr. Kendall had climbed a tree, and leaned back ward In tha purauanre of hla wark, thinking he had ennpped hla eafely el rap aa tiaual. TU eiiap partl. and aa hla feel were held by tha cllmb- ra ha awung head dowaward unlll , ha fell II feet to the ground. Ir. Smith took him lo Walla Walla. where aa examination revealed the fart that hla ahoulder Joint waa eo badly broken and epllntered that It could not ba adjuated. Hla ahoulder waa bandaged by the aurgeona. and i hla only hope to retain He partial uae la that a falae joint will be formed I eventually. The accident la especially) unionunaie in inai Mr, Kenaau naa ai family depending upon hla wagea fori their aupport, - Wealon echool dlatrlrt will hold Ital annual meeting next Monday. June t, when there, will be a director and clerk to elect. The meeting will take place at the achool houae at two o'clock In tha afternoon, and tha dl- rectora are anxloua that every tax payer aad patron In tha dlatrlrt at tend who can poeetbly do eo. They point out that tha meeting la aa Im portant ona and that cltlaena of the dlatrlrt ahould elgnlfy by their pres ence their Intereat In the arhool'a auc ceaa and progreaa. It will be the proper time) and place for thoe who have euggeetlona to offer to preaent them. In order that the d I rectora may leam tha aenllment of tha dietrlct. U K. Harlan, publisher of the Pilot Rock Record, waa In town Sunday and had the honor of conveying an eminent local Journalist to and from an Athena ball game. Mr. Harlan ia accompanied by Jack Root, a heavyweight boxer of considerable re nown. Said ball game, by the way, waa won by Athena from Helix, acore I to I. Athena took aa early lead which the Hells aluggera could not overcome, although batting Pat Hen derson out of the box. With their home honklnr and their nrrupanta eheerlnr. eighteen Kree- armee autoroolillaa panuled Into wea ton Tuesday aa an advertisement of Kreearaier'a Cherry )ay next Wednee- lar. June 21. Ilewllnir the procession the Mlltiin-Kreewaicr hand played two rmiinjr aelectlonann Main street while tha jovial Cherry lv boosters tarried In our little city, -ihav then went on 10 Athena. Aclama and Pendleton. Jt waa a ripplnjf publicity atunu While hauling hay from tha Dupnla Held tha team of Kliaa Thorn became frightened when tha wagun as-erred tiMn them In maKtnir a turn, ami ran away. Waller Milton waa pitched out of the watron, landing on hla head, and Thome jumiet nut. but both escaped Injury. One of the horaea waa gashed a ltd th coupling pole broken when the team crashed through three fences. Zane Lanadale, -who waa a member of a claaa of twelve civil engineers who were graduated thla year from the Oregon Agricultural College, ar rived Monday from Corvallla for an extended visit with relatlvea and friends on the Weston uplanda. Mr. Lanadale did not accompany him. aa her grandmother, who la an In vail i. requlrea her attention. Lilian Garrett, aald to be II years old. but who gave her age aa IT. waa arrested by the Milton police Saturday on a charge of footing checks and ha been turned over to the Juvenile court authorities at Pendleton. The girl la aaid to have followed a carnival com pany to Free aler from her home In Weaton, where ehe kept houae for her rather " and little brothers. Her mother la dead. After visiting tier mother and frlenda at Weaton, Mra. Viva Kor- Deen left Monday on her return home to Wallace. Idaho. Prior to her de parture Mra. NorDean entertained Mlaa Haxel Wyrlck of Pendleton, who la at home for vacation after attend ing a achool for girls at Tarrytowo-on- the-Hudaon, New York. - Tha Ferguson boya. Elmer, Jeaa and Beet who are bustling young far- mera of the Weaton uplanda have each filed upon a half aectlon of land In the vicinity of Bear creek, thla land having been returned to aettlement from tha Wenaha reserve. Their hold Intra lie In one body, and will be val uabla for pasture. , Mra," Ada Wallace rnruh." former state president, of the W. C. T. U. ami now prohibition worker, will apeak at tho United Brethren Church next Monday. June lit, at 2:'W n. m. "Mra, Cniuh la a noted speaker." say the lo cal W. C T. U. Indie, "and wo want aa many aa possible to be preaent and heartier." Scrtouslv HI front 1 he double afflic tion of anpendic.it ia and trail atone. Mra, J. S. Lieuallen was conveyed Tuesday to St. Anlhony'a hospital, Pendleton, where ahe aubinlMed lo an niMMtlim nArfnrmed he tha Dra. Rnv- den and Dr. Smith. Knomiravlnir re ports bare ainee been heard aa to her nonunion. .. ? Mr. and Mra. 8. A. Barnes, Mr. and Mra. A. L. Douglaa and Mr. and Mrs, W. H. Gould left .yesterday on a oamp Inir trip to Meacham creek. The T.kadkr man la oonfident that the la dies of the part will see that he is remembered with "mess of trout." dilutee P. Smith, for many yeare a resident of I'matiUa county and an earW sawmill man of Weston mown tain, died recently at the home of his sister In Long Beach, Calif. Re was a member of the Masonlo, Odd Fellows and Woodmen order. . While in a state of exhilaration, and possibly antirlpatinjr the Fourth of July, George Schnitxer discharged his shotgun the other day In the city lim its. In consequence the municipal ex chequer waa fattened to the extent of $7.50. , v ' ' Accompanying her parents, Misa Edna Banister returned last week from Corvallla, where she a as graduated from the domestio science deartinent of the Oregon Agricultural College. The firm of Zehm Duncan has dis solved partnership, Orval Duncan re tiring. R. E. Zenm will continue to oonduct the Pastime pool hall. Pete McFadtlen " returned Monday from Corvallla, to which city he was called by his father's death a few weeka ago. All those knowing themselves In debted to us are requested to call and settle at once. Eehut & Duncan. Mrsl C. G. King and children left yesterday for a visit with her daugh ter at Hermistoo, . . H. A. Brandt has purchased a Ford roadster from H. U Uedrick, the local mWa W$t ( i W it! "a ass is i is nasi se- . : W T V ' We've bought our binder twine at the Buy yours of us and you'll be equally fortunate. Come and see the McCormick Binder with Motor attached. . ,. . John Deere the same. . J. I. Case and International Engines and Threshers. Weber, Winona and John Deere Wagons. WATTS ii ROGER cow for sale-i . Good, frezh, milch Weaton Meat Market. Mra. F. H. Beathe of Seattle la vis iting her daughter and aoa at Weston. Anyone wanting a dandy milch cow ahould promptly call on ua. Weaton Meat Market. Mra W. B. Payne aad her two sons left Tuesday for a visit with her ata ter at Walla. Wallal Frank Smith la helping to look af ter the wanta of patrone at the Pas time pool and billiard parlor. Mlsa Ora Martin, a at a dan t of Was ton Hl.h haa sons to her home In Tygh Valley, Oregon, for tha vacatlou a. - - Dr. and Mra. F. D. Watts and Worth Watte left Tuesday In their Hudson car for an outing on tha shores of Coeur d' A lens lake. The boys of J. H. Williams' Sunday achool claaa at the United Brethren church apent part of the week on an outing trip to the Umatilla river. Sara Panister and family passed through Weaton Monday In their new touring car en routs from Wallowa county to their future borne near Waltaburgv- Mra. 1. H. Williams, son - and daughter are expected to arrive to morrow from Portland, and will occu py the neatly remodeled cottage oi Eaat Main street which Mr. Williams has prepared for them. Gall Miller Williams, a boy of ten. te a gifted dramatic reader for one of his years, and haa given several auccessfut re citals on different occasions In Port land. ......... FREEWATER CHERRY DAY NEXT WEDNESDAY. JUNE 21 5V: V FORMS. SPRING CANYON and ROCK SPRINGS COAL The coals that make the white heat. A good supply conatanly on hand. LEHIGH PORTLAND CEMENT always in stock, RED CEDAR FENCE POSTS from Puget Sound in any quantity. They are well tarred, or wa will sell yon the tar to tar your old posts.',.. ' ;. t :.. " A-I RED FIR and TAMARACK WOOD from Kamela; lft-inch, 155r inch and 4-foot lengths. WESTON BRICKYARD With tha waning of the peach la. duatry In the Freewater dlatrlct. H haa been decided to abandon Peach Day and to boost tor the cherry, tha growing or which delectable fruit Is fast becoming- one of Freewater'a principal : lnduatries. So Freewatet will have a Cherry Day next Wednee day, June II, and Weston people arv asaured that they will receive a glad welcome on that occasion. Among the several features are the following: Big cherry display hundreds ot dollars In premluma.' ' ' '-" Fine music by S0-plece band. . Ball game. Freewater va. Umapine Dance afternoon and evening In Commercial Club rooms, Auto parade and races. Water fight by fire department Sports of all kinda. including 15 foot greased pole with cash prise on top. . . . ,. Heat rooms In all the stores. Free meal served to largest number arriving on two or four-horse draws vehicle. . Plenty to eat five apecial placer where meala will be served. Coronation of King Btng and Queen Ann at 10 a. ra. Cash prises will be awarded to tha amount of t?00, and there will be free cherrlea for "everybody. The Freewater Merchants' Association Is directing the affair, and Its aecretary. Claude Prltchett, will be glad to an awer all Inquiries for special Informa tion aa to premluma or other mattera Having a progressive and growing little city. Freewater will open wide ita galea In order that nelghbora and frlenda from other communities may make Ita better acquaintance. It ia getting together a ton of cherrlea with which to teed Ita visitors. The Universal Car The after-coat is the real-cost of a motor ear. Because Ford cars are carefully made of the best materials obtainable. Ford after-cost is low. And in the matter of service, Ford leads. 8800 service stations in this country, where you get quick, cour teous service at a fair, economical price. Touring Car, $492.46; Runabout, $442.45. On sala at , WESTON GARAGE H. L. HEDRICK, Proprietor NOTICE FOR PVBUCATION. Department of the Interior, V. S. Land Office at 1 Grande, Or, June th. 11. Notice la hereby given that Charles Hulett March, of Weaton. Oregon, who, on February l, mad Homestead Entry No. 0115M, for SB NW14 and SWU NEK. Section SO. Township 4 North. F.ange T East. iviiiin.ii Meridian haa filed notice of Intention to make three-year proof. to eatabllah claim to tne tana w described, before Frank Sallng, clerk of the Circuit Court ot CImatl'la coun ty, at Pendleton, Oregon, on the S9th day of July, 1S1. rinimnt nsmea aa witnesses: Sel- mcr O. Thompaon, Thomaa C. Getting. ) Aleck Kling, an Herrert Marcn, a.i of Weaton, Oregon. , : F. C. BRAMWEIX. Rectster. Eieystone Eiii 30 III 00 If you were buying an automobile you would read carefully its specifications. Investigate the Keystone. STEEL BOX ' eliminates danger of cracking: and warping; E3 U 1 P 1 R prevents marring furniture Brush Adjustment Dust Pans ALL METAL PARTS hc.vynkkei During the past five years the KEYSONE VACUUM -' CLEANER Ls embodied QUALITY. EFFICIENCY, DURABILITY, ailenee, and EASE of OPEKATIUN. Tbe Price is Right Formerly $12.50-now $8.00 ) ! j giti'ir man. , OB