........... 1 , . PROFESSIONAL CARDS I JAN SCIENCE ?UV YOUR HflUSE ON WHEELS ? ' 1 I ..' : ,1 FRANCIS McMEaAMIN Lawyer HBPPJffiR, OSIKOOX Roberta Building. 'i hone (iiii james d. Lurcher "niiiey-uf-.'.aw stami:. . . OREGON Will oe at the Highway Inn Wed nesday of each we k. DR. W W, ILLSLEY ."opnthlc 1".!SI,1N AND BURGEON 'Phono Res. 711 Office 551 Office over Bank Rldg., Hermlston. . Calls answered at all hours. WOODSON & sweekT r-' ATTOttXKYS-AT-1 ,.V,V Masonic Hull :i Heppner, Oregon. DR. F. V. PRIME ; 1) B X X 1 S T It Y HliltMISTo.N, ORB, liaiik Building "Phones: Olliec 83. Residence 751. Hurs: 8 a. m. to 5 p tn. Pendhton Shoe Shop 118 West Court St. NEW METHOD BH E REPARUNG We Rebuild. Not Cobble The test W Or lor (lie Least Money Pendleton, Oregon WE PAY PARCEL POST ONE WAS Marindlo IV.-" "tv Parlor Mae WeUsd uaird Stangier Building, Pendleton, Ore. Suite 24-25-26. . . .P.. ie Connection Shampooing Scalp Treatment; Marcelling Facials Ha i rd tea sing Elect rolysi: Hair Tinting Manicuring Marinello Preparations Hair Goods ASSIST ITS IX SECURING MORE SUBSCRIBE It KOR THE BOARUMAN MJKROR, T THE KIND ACT WILL BE , I VPPRE IViliD. j m , IIMB Bi,!fl.iM!!lililJil.lj .., I The Only Restaurant in I; Pendleton Employ ig a I full crew of white help. f THE FRENCH I R E S T U R A N T ROHHACH BROS., PROPS. Iilegunt in. vi the I Rooms In Connection. e I 11 Fresh Meat Delivered Every Wednesday f I will be in I.oardman and on th Project every Wedne-day with fresh meat. Watch for the Dodge deli. wagon, and When you hoar the lion, flag us. I have much territory U cover and can't tarry long, Bp WAtoi; for the Dodge on Wedni lay J . L . C A L K I i!!'v.i!lf'''i!1;pi('!,!!;!:'ll in .' ':,:!tijj,ii";!!jV!!,!,i;t,.:i!- :ftetaf 8Ctlltt The Continental Insurance Co. of New York ARTHUR L. LARSEX f .. .1 n Highir hwtitM TECHHOLOSY tight Schools; Seventy Departments FALL TF.UM OPENS SEPT. 19, 1921 For information write to th Re.rittrr Oregon Agricultural College COKVALL1S m WE- Sr. 151 ""1 Q A New Jersey man has invented tliis Automobile bungalow, It pas kitchen, pantry, sink, bedroom, stove and the front scat is a li vinfr room, a dining table being fitted over tbc radiator when needed. Through scientific weighting it is not top-heavy Copyrighted feature' printed by this p iper by special arrangement with Popular Science-Monthly, Returns from the special election held In Crook county show that the county unit measure carried two to one. This county is the first in the sta e to adopt the plan. The measure wili enable rural communities to have advantages enjoyed by cities. All school districts of the county, exclu sive of those of the first and second plies, will be combined and will be pre ided over by five directors select ed at targe. One rural supervisor will be in charge, lie will, in a manner similar to that of city superintendent, select the teachers. T'n. following fourth-class postmas ters were appointed in Oregon to fill vacancies caused by resignation: Wei lie C. Griffin, Arago, vice Caleb C. Robison; John M, DeMoss, DeMosta Springs, Vice Amos Thompson; Ernest J. Matone, Holley. vice Charles L. Ha lone; Lawrence A. Prticott, Imbler, yire George T. Ferguson; Otto M. Mur phy, S!arquani, vice James C. Mar , crge T. EUsey, Merlin, vice Mattie Oean; James Bell, Pioneer, vict Maggie E. Bell; Renry 0. Smith, Fort son, ice Henry C. Smith; Herman L Euuk, 11 issou, vice Maihew Morrison. A special election to vote on the pro-, posed issue of municipal bonds amounting to 1180,000 to take up Con- reamery, with plant and headquarters t!on-.. fl, ,,,.,d all), wa;rantfu indebted' t North Powder. ness and to exld the present wattr A mans moetint o' fishermen wag system, has been set for September if. r'd at Astoria r- ?ntly to discuss the ! AJHJ n th. nmKi.nf tj, ,:,!a. ty to th"' 193D expnnitioa in Portland Cmstlllfl county farmers have r t sd over "00 acres of sunflowers this vear for Bila ;e. The tonnage from an ncrs of sunflowers is double that from :in acre of corn, wh'le the food value hi the same. N. J. Fullerton was killed and Ros e Foster seriously injured when a atlder rolled on them while they were doing assessment on their min ng claim on Hurricane creek, 15 miles om Joseph. Twenty-four Baker business men i '.do a junketing trip in automobiles iirough Grant county. The purpose if the trip was to develop closer re iV.tio:is between B ilier and Grant coun ty merchants. Professor M. E. Peck, Instructor of 'tology at Willamette university, has .turned to Salem from easter.i Ore gon, where he arsemblcd a coll : lion of approximately 2500 different spe clos of grasses. A joint meeting of residents o" the Lone WoU section, near North Pow 'rr. Baker comity, met last week to organise a company to begin a new (hi naee of purse . ining, The gill no iters are planning to refuse to de- ver my fish to a cannery that buys f"om the purse seiners. Salem canneries have offered as much as $70 i ton for striglrss beans, as against JC0 a ton paid two years igo, whm war prices were at their peak. One concern expects to process ipproxlmately 400,000 pounds of this oro''uct. Thirty-five smell tires have been started recently in the forest neat Rogue river by persons who desire to have the brush cleaned out. This is an unnual occurrence in that loc. lity and the forest service is busy seeking evidence to arrest the culprits. Checks have been mailed to a'l emi tters who filed Claims in connection with the failure of the Yoncalla State haul;, according to announcement :nado by Frank Bratnwell, state super intendent of banks. This is the final dividend and represents 7 per cent. Dr. Richard M. Erumficld, former Rcseburg dentist and leader in local fraternal, and social affairs, will go on trial in the circuit court at Rose burg, Wednesday, October 5, o,i a charge of first decree murder In con nection with the brutal slaying of Dei.u.it Rui-sall on (he night of July 13. This was the announcement made by Judge Bingham, afir he had ovei ruled a motion for a change of venue pre sented by the attorneys for the defend ant. The total net income of taxable pr 50ttS in Oregon during the year 1919 amounted to S168,240,006, according to he i': ures that have been compiled by the ofNoe of Milton A. Miller, col lector of intTiial revenue. The tax paid on (bis income was $8, 232, 1147. Two persons of the state paid taxes on Incomes of from 00,000 to' $7S0, 000; the same number paid taxes on between $400,000 and $500,000. Seven are listed with incomes ranging from $150,000 to $200,000, and 18 with in comes of from $i 00,000 to $150,000. state fair at Helena, September 12 to 17, then to the Washington state faH at Yakima, September 19 to 24, and back to the Oregon state fair at Salem, September 26 to October 1. At Love creek, 20 miles east or F.tker, development of coal is going on by loci.l people. The shaft has now readied a depth of 125 feet, showing a body of lignite coal four and a half f et in width. Residents of Cascade Locks report that a crew of engineers is engaged on both sides of the Columbia making preliminary surveys for the proposed bridge near the site of the mythical Bridge of the Gods. Z CONDENSED STATEMENT OE THE CONDITION J OF ARLINGTON NATIONAL BANK X ARLINCYON. OREGON $ At the Close of Business on June 30, 1921. REHOURC Loans and Discounts Ponds, Stocks and Warrants Furniture & Ftxtun Otbar Real Estate .. I 'vh and Due from 09,358.05 ; 70,370.02 1.495.00 I I.IARIMTH1N Sloe!; $ 25,000 00 and (Jndlvid- 58,017.93 it;i 1 2,500.00 iceounts with ed. Reserve Bank !. 42 1.89 $472.12 HeetHMM iniiis-iinoM , will be died in a forcible way during the county fair at Albany. The fair board has decid'd to desiccate the op nine- dny, October 4, as "1925 Port land E: petition Day." Construction of a new railroad from Portland to Tillamook, via the Wilson river, has developed as a probability of the near future. Ralph Budfl, presi dent of the Great Northern, is i:i Pott' land inveiiagaung, with the idea oi purchase, the GaleB Creek & Wilson River railroad that extends 13 mill beyond WUkcsboro, the terminal of the United Railways, which is an af filiated property. Should the purchase of the road be consummated it is understood that it will be extended down the Wilson river to Tillamook. Most of the 30-odd thousand ex-service men in the state will soon receive bonus application blanks, according to Hany C. Brumbaugh, secretary of the worl 1 war veterans' state aid com mi ., on, who has placed the last of the :,i;;nUs in the malts. The forms were 10: warded to tne various Ameri can Legion pests, of which there are 104 in ths state. A large force of of-' fico workers will check over th blani.s as they are returned. Correct applications will he given a payment number and incorrect ones will ho re turned to cureless uppiica.itB for cor recti OIL It ns'tti'tlvp S!;';io:t has an nounced that examinations will be held October 29 at Baker, Bend, Kla math Kails, La Grainle. Ontario, Pen dleton and The Dailes, n which eilf; Iblet may qualify for appointments to the United States military academy ai j Vv'est Point and the United Slates I naval academy at Annapolie. Three i principal midshipmen, with three si 1 Inmates, each, are to tie named to An i napcils, and one principal cadet, with j two attentate:-, to West Point The third case of anthrax among hu ! man beinvx to be rei ort- d in two years I is that of George Aldredge, a Bend sheep herder, who is bi . ) h ive : contracted the d.sease ii- -s : uected sheep. The sum of $21,505.20 wa3 spent by the state boerd for vocational elura tion In support of 16 departments of ! agriculture, employing 19 instructors ' according to the annual report of tin board. A number of applications for bonus ards have been received at the Vf j fice of the world war veterans' state ; aid commission in Salem, the fore runners of a deluge expected wilbin Thirty-four head of dairy cattle have been shipped from the Oregon Agri cultural college herd at Gorvallis for entry in the Spokane interstate fair, BeDtembM 5 to 9. From Spokane lb' mals will be sent to the Montana W Flfl LOSSES HEAVY THIS YEAR Olympia, Wash, Eire losses in the grain fields of eastern Washington tire heavier this year than In many seasons, Captain W. A. Gross, assist ing state fire marshal stated on his return from two months of active fight In ; of fires in the grain fields of the Walla Walla and Palouse districts. The fires have been greater in num ber and have been harder to control, due to the extremely dry and hot sea son, with the resultant heavy foliage on the grain. Two fires in the Walla Valla district recently destroyed two fields of 7C0 a.id 735 acres of grain. respectively. One of these fires was directh traceable to a lighted match or a cigarette stub carelessly thrown from a passing automobile. Second to this menace was the ac cumulation of smut dust Is threshing machines, the smut being unusually heavy. Explosions of this dust caused by sparks of slatic electricity were frequent anil caused heavy losses. The Slieep-Herder'c Pay. A telegram from Kallspeli, Mont, (n town Of wide horizons and vide arched sky or fox-glove blue), brings sad news and good. The wages of sheep berders have fallen with a dull thud from $nnt n month to 160, bat the number of borders is just the same, I'm- here is n life where the wage never was In cash, but rather in tlnii satisfaction men get Crom tar and lonely places, where DO elevated trains rattle overhead, end no shrill urchins ere "shaggexi" by the police. To the ibeep-herder the prairie nod the HAU ing lowlandf must ever be the sen to him who longs fur the eit. This week and next the little wagons will go off. One by one, into the loneliness and de light of vast Montana. Bven at only $(hi per month i ty will Sick their whip ns they start and say : "This is the life!" Christian Science Monitor. Fine Engineering Work. A notable feat In road engineering whs the recent repair in New- Mexico of a section Of concrete highway that had been undermined by heavy- rains. The engineer of the United states bu reau of public rends first placed a Shield of brush alongside the guard ngninsi further washing, and then quickly substituted n solid bullt-undef lied for the damaged portion of the foundation. Sagging concrete slabs were brought Into proper position on wooden stringers raised by hiinil-op- e rated jacks. All toosened pints of the roadbed were then filled In with wet sand and this was Orroly consoli dated with n benvy rum worked by fonf men. Oribbing WAS placed un der the strini'ers before the jecks were removed. Th concrete slabs proved of high quality, nod are said to have withstood setting and restoration with out development of crack or Saw, i R. X. Stnnheld, President Frank Sloan, 1st Vice-President Ralph A. Holte, Cashier M. R. ling, and Yice-IVewldent 5ank of Stanfield Capital Stock and Surplus $37,500.00 i Four Per Cent Interest Paid on Time Certificates of Deposit. iiimMimi iiihiiiii w-wit4n)tMiniHttn Drop in at the PASTIME Candies Pool Room Tobacco Barber shop ICE CREAM A. B. CHAFFEE Hoardman, Oregon Tfee Highway Inn O. H. WARNER, Proprietor Poardiuan, Oregon In Connection BO A RDM AN AUTO LIVERY "We go anywhere Right or lay" WE SELL LAND or show you a homestead. We sfiw it first. Let us show you. Let The Boardman Mirror Print Your Butter W rappers Ohin t3ry Offic:r3 Warned. Washington, l. C. Citizens all over the state of Ohio are serving notice but probiblUon oiiicers, or those Im personating them, wiU receive a warm welcome if they attempt search and s. izure without warrant. Announce ment Was i u Jo that these citizens .' ill stand on their guarantees under the fourth amendment of the consti- iitioti and the protection afforded by --he Ohio constitution. BOARDMAN Townsite Co. E. P. DODD, Pres. 2 City Lots for Sale at Proper Prices I Army Brs Married Men. San gTanciSCO, Cai. The United States army wauls fighters, ami it will enlist no more married men. Orders frp ii Washington antiouni cd at 9th corps area headquarters say that no more married Soldiers are to be accept, d, and "shacks" occupied by married enlisted HMO shall be removed or salvaged. Methodists to Raise Fund. Spokane, Wash. Under a resolution adopted at a session of the Columbia river conference of the Methodist Episeopal church the last .Sunday in October will be devoted to the centen ary movement of the church. An effort will be made at that time to raise the money pledged to the movement. Boardman is a New Town But Not a Boom Town BtriXETIN OK BOARDMAN OOMMtrMTTV CHURCH SEinici r,n r.v iiiei.-o Sunday School 10:30 a. m. Church Service 11:30 a. rn. Christian Lndeavor 7:30 p, m 1'rayer Meeting, every Thurs day at 8 m All are welcome. Ideally located on railroad and Columbia river, far enough away 1 from any lary;e town to naturally become the trading center of a wonderful growing country.