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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1917)
THE Miss May Slaughter of Les Angeles Is er j lying a visit in this city with her sister, Mrs. Rees. Madam Bel sea muer goes to Pendle ton this afternoon to meet her daugi - ' tar, who is coming from Lancaster, Wis , to make her home here. There will be plenty to go around in this country and some for Europe. Don’t speculate. If you have money to speculate with-buy a government bond. Buy what you need, as you need it, from your regular dealer. Pay as promptly as possible. It costs a lot to do business now and your dealer needs the money. We carry a staple line of goods to choose from at the right price, and a safe place to trade. R. C. Challis is suffering from a | sprained back, caused by lifting heavy | beeves this week. Z Pumphrey is helping him in the butcher shop dur ing hie disablement. Harry Chapman Is visiting bis grand parents at Dayton, Oregon, this week. He was accompanied by Tom Jensen. They will both be employed in Pen- | dleton after this week. The Red Cross headquarters have been moved to the balcony of the drug store. There is plenty of sewing on hand and the need for the-e com pleted garments is growing greater all the time. S. C. Mack, business man of Board man, accompanied by his wife, autoed to Hermiston Saturday afternoon and while here were guests of the gentle man’s father, E. W. Mack, proprietor of the local drug store. B. S. KINGSLEY Prayer meeting Thursday night DIRECTORY No. 1, West No. 15, west 9:66 a.m. 7:05 p. m. No. 2, east... 8:80 p.m. No. 6. east... 6:33 a. m. No. 16. east... 9:16 a. m. Post Office Hours General delivery window open week days 8 a.m. to S. p. m. Sundays and holidays from 9 to 10 a. m. . 9:20 a. m. Mail closes for No. i, west 6:00 p. m. Mail closes for No. 6, east ... 2:30 p. m. Mail closes for No. 2. east .... .. 6:00 p. m. Mali closes for No. 16. west. Library Hours 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 each Saturday. County Officials ............ C. W. Phelps Circuit Judge...... District Attorney Judge ................... ......Rescoe i. Keator ......... C. H. Marsh .... B. E. Anderson .... H. M. Cockburn ___ R T. Brown ___ J. D. Tayler Grace Gilliam ....... C. P. Strain Willard Bradley ................. I. E. Young ............... J.T. Brown ......... Ben Burroughs Commissioners — Clerk Sheriff Treasurer . Assessor.... . Surveyor .. School Supt Coroner....... Recorder..... County court meets the first Wednesday la each mouth. City Officials Mavor Recorder ...... Chief of Police Treasurer Fire Chief ...... City Physician. City Attorney.. City surveyor Councilmen .... ................. .. ........... F.C. McKenzie ........................................ C.. M. Jensen ...........................................C. C. Salter .........................................F. A. Phelps W. Beasley ................................ O... Wainscott ................................... W. J. Warner .................................... 3.. R. Oldaker ............................. J.. D. Watson ....................................Wm. Kennedy ..................................... H.. M. Straw ..... A. L. Larson F. R. Reeves C. S. McNaught School District Officials Directors ............................. C. S. McNaught, Chm. ............................................... J. D. Watson F. B. Swayze Clerk........... J, H. Young WEATHER REPORT perature for the days Date High 2» ..... ... 77 3).. 1...... 93 and nights for the past Dato High so 47 45 45 50 64 91 M. D. SOROCOS Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Newell and little son Herbert departed Wednesday for Boston, Mass., where they will be guests at the home of the gentleman's mother for a month. During the ab sence of Mr. Newell the management of the project will be looked after by M. D. Scrogge. Peter Sheridan and Waldon Rhea promoted a dance in Butter Creek Sunday school, 10 a. m. hall, six miles southwest of this city, F. C. Bruce, Supt. last Saturday evening. Quite a good Morning service, 11 o’clock. ly number of Hermiston young people Prayer meeting Thursday eve., 8:00. attended the function and report an Choral union every Tuesday evening enjoyable time. A week from tonight at 8:00. another dance is scheduled at the B. Y. P. U., 7:00 o’clock. same place. Evening service, 8:00 o’clock. H. Bartholomew, sheep baron, was Strangers are always welcome to the over from Stanfield Tuesday paying a services of this church. Special music. L. S. Chapman visit to old time friends In this city. Pastor. Years ago Harry used to range sheep in the vicinity of Hermiston but rapid CATHOLIC CHURCH settlement of the country since then Hermiston, 10:00 a. m. encroached on bls preserves, causing Umatilla, 10:00 a. m. him to move with his flock to the Everybody welcome to these neighboring town of Stanfield. vices. Mrs. P. B. Siscel is enjoying a visit from her brother Homer, who arrived CHRISTIAN SCIENCE from bls home in Wasco Monday. The Services held in Civic Center ball. young man is twelve years old—just Sunday, 10:45 a. m. the right age to form youthful ac Subject, "God." quaintances and participate with local Everybody cordially Invited, lads in the real sport of bathing and F T. George, T. M. Johnson and W. playing. He will extend bis visit to H. Crary of Echo, attended the road bis sister over a week or two. meeting here last Saturday evening, S M. McMillin, employe in Siscel’s together with delegates from all of confectionery and ice cream parlors, the towns interested in this and Mor. left Saturday for The Dalles, being row counties. called there by the serious Illness of his mother. The lady, who is over 70 years of age, has been ill for some Having disposed of the Hermiston time and there Is little hope for her Herald all persons owing accounts to recovery. Mrs. McMillin preceded same are requested to see the under her husband to The Dalles and for the signed and make settlement at an past two weeks has been constantly io early date. attendance at the bedside of her rela- BAPTIST CHURCH F. R Reeves Co-operative Observer Taken Up CHURCH NOTICES. METHODIST CHURCH Morning service 11 a. m. 10 a. m — Sunday-school Theo Parks, Supt. 6:30 p. m.—Epworth League. Mrs. Paul S. Jones, president. CALL FOR BIDS Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has taken ap and holds at hl. ranch about 6 Ride will be opened by the Board of miles east of Hermiston, the following described ■tock: Directors of School District No. 112 of 1 black mare, brande JI on right shoulder, Umatilla county, Oregon, on July 21, white stripe on face; about 2 years old. 1 sorrel mars, no bread, white stripe on face; 1917, 2:30 p. m., for the following: about 1 year old. 1. To furnish motor truck of suffic The above described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in ient capacity to carry about 35 child band Monday. July 30, 1917. at 10:00 o’clock deemed by owner. •d via-44c The Lay Ranch We have taken on the CHANDLER AUTO AGENCY Ask about the for a real “classy” car SAPPER BROS. GARAGE And save heating up your house during the summer months. best of satisfaction. ren of primary and grammar school age to and from the school house of the said district via the route and ac cording to the schedule laid down by the board of directors of the said dis trict. 2. To furnish motor transportation to the high school students of the dis trict to and from the Hermiston high school. 3 To furnish transportation to the children of the north and west end of the district to and from school by either motor or horse drawn vehicle. Our stoves give the FLORENCE' AUTOMATIC NEW PERFECTION We can supply either in the two or three burner size, with or without oven, with or without high shelf. Let us show you what a convenience and saving these stoves are, I Oregon Hardware & Implement Company BIG ATTRACTION COM ING TO AUDITORIUM Tom Marxen, manager of the local Auditorium, has secured a treat for the people of Hermiston by booking the well known and highly spoken of vocal and musical attraction known as Ku olias’ Hawaiians for the evening of July 24. The City of Hermiston does ordain as follows: Sec. 1. No person, firm or corporation shall enuse, permit or allow any irrigation water or water used for domestic or other purposes to run upon or across any of the streets of the City of Hermiston unless the same is confined in proper ly constructed flumes, ditches, pipe lines or cul- verts, and no ditches, flumes. pipe lines or cul verts for water shall be constructed in. upon or across any of the street, of said city until a per mit therefor shall first be obtained from the City Recorder of said eity. and any such ditch, flume, pipe line or culvert shall be constructed under the supervision of the city engineer and of such material as said engineer may prescribe. Sec. 2. It shall be the duty of every person who uses such ditch, flume, pipe line or culvert for the transmission of water, or whose land is served by water which pasees through such ditch, flume, pipe line or culvert to keep the same In repair and any person who shall fail to make any such repair within 5 day. after notified so to do by ths City Rscorder shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof before the City Recorder, be punished by a fine of not less than $5.00 nor more than 860.00. Sec. 3. Any person, firm or corporation who shall violate any of the provisions of this ordi nance shall, upon conviction thereof before the City Recorder, be punished by a fine of not less than 86.00 nor more than 860.00. Passed the council thia 6th day of July, 1917. Attest: C. M. Jensen, City Rscorder Approved by the mayor thia 5th day of July, 1917. F. C. McKenzie, Mayor FANTASTIC GOLDFISH. Some Curious Shapes Produced by the Exports of Japan. Japanese fish breeders took advan tage of one of nature’s pranks to obtain this much decorated goldfish. Years ago a Jap found in his aquarium a fish with two tails. He was so well pleased with the novelty that he undertook to make it the basis of a new type. Thus the one accident by nature became the grandfather of a race of two tailed fish. We call them Japanese fantails. Not satisfied with the double tall, the breeders next set about molding the bodies of their fish Into round balls. Breeders first picked out the fish with the shortest bodies and bred them ev ery year by painstaking selection. Fish with shorter and shorter bodies were produced until today the accepted type of Japanese fantail bas a body as round as a ball. Not all fantails are alike. One with the ends of the tall cut off flat is called the square tall. Another with a slight Inward curve to the edges of the tall is called veil tall. A third, with a deep eut out tall, is named the ribbon tail. All these varieties have long tails and tins. You will recognise them instant ly when you see them in an aquarium floating about like bits of lace in the water.—Philadelphia North American. The Talmud. The Talmud is the compendium of ancient Jewish oral or unwritten law, as distinguished from the Pentateuch, or written law. Its origin Is coeval with the return of the Jewish people from the Babylonian captivity. 536 B. C. Its compilation In Hebrew was be gun by the scribes, and by their sue- ceasors the work was carried on till Description of the route and specif 220 B. C. The Talmud Is a combination cations of the vehicles and the sched of prose and poetry and contains two ule may be bad from the clerk or from elements, legal and legendary. Ita any member of the board of directors. morality resembles that of the New Successful bidder will be required to Testament, and Ita philosophy reminds furnish a good and sufficient bond ns very forcibly of that of the great The board reserves the right to re ject any and all bids. A Philosopher's Viewpoint. Henry Sommerer, ”1 don't expect to fence In many acres - dv43c Clerk Diet. No. of this beautiful old world." says a Georgia philosopher, "but what little Several parties have been in the city ' ground I gain I hope to make as beau this week from different parts of the tiful as old Adam’s possessions were country look lag over improved land , | before he ran away with the idea that what he didn’t know about the apple with a view to purchasing and becom- n business wasn’t worth knowing." At ing permanent residents of this pros- ; lanta Constitution, pero»« irrigated district. Recorder’s Financial Report AEROPLANE PROGRESS. at Los Angeles, Calif., arrived in Her miston Monday to remain a week or Ordinance No. 92 so, during which time he will be en An ordinance to prevent the running of water upon or across the streets of the city except gaged in the adjudication oi water where a permit therefor shall first be obtain- at right matters. 7:30. Choir practice Friday, 7:30 p. m. - Columbia school house Sunday school at 2 p. m. Preaching services Sunday afternoon it 3 o'clock. Strangers will be welcome to these services. T. A. Graham, Pastor. -adv OREGON. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Drake and daughter Maggie came overland from Goldendale the fore part of the week and visited three or four days with tbeir son, E. J. Drake, and family, at their ranch home one mile east of this Read full particulars io the big ad city. in The Herald next week and then Oliver P. Morton, attorney for the make preparations to attend this high reclamation service with headquarters class entertainment. » Hermiston, Oregon HERMISTON, LOCAL BRIEFS Don’t Get Excited Phone 171 HERMISTON HERALD, or THE CITY or HERMISTON Statement of the fund balances of the 4 City of Boat Body Machines Do Not Rako tho Hermiston as of July 3, 1917. Name of Fund Air Like Harrows. Debit Credit Genera] fund.............. .......... $ 929.82 The one unmistakable improvement Water fund ........................... 116.94 66.84 which has been adopted for aeroplanes Irrigation fund........................ . Library fund .... 534.17 Is a boatlike body in which the aviator I Street fund....... 270.98 1785.07 site. No longer does he perch on the Treasurers cash lower wing of a biplane and watch the earth driftback between bls legs. The boat body was adopted not to spare his emotions or shield his body from the wind, but to enable the machine to plow on with the least possible dis turbance of the air. Each plane, each strut, each projection, leaves a wake of Its own. A single wake, which marks the easy flowing together of air behind a single body, is better. The modern aeroplane approaches this ideal; the old machine raked the air like a har row. That change In form we owe to the scientist and his laboratory. He meas ured the resisting effect of wires vi brating in the wind, of braces, of fuel tanks, of radiators and of human legs and arms. He found that the sum total was enormous. The aeroplane builder was compelled to abandon bls cherished idea that to obtain speed as little sur face and bulk as possible should be ex posed. He has learned from the scien tist that a large correctly designed bulk Inclosing passengers, engines, steering wheels and tanks slips through the air more easily than an aggregation of small irregular shapes widely scattered. —Waldemar Kaempfert in American Review of Reviews. Relativity of Space. It so happened that a new professor of music had just been installed in a certain college for women. Naturally be was the subject of a heated discus sion among his pupils to be. Said one: "Handsome! Why, bis nose and the point of his chin nearly meet." "My dear,” cautioned his champion, with dignity, “why do you exaggerate so? You know as well as 1 that they’re miles apart.’’—New York Post. Both on tho Watch. Wile — That new lady next door stood in her dining room for half an hour today staring rudely into ours. Husband—How do you know? Wife— Why, I happened to be in our front bedroom watching her.—London Tele- graph. Angry. “She trumped bis ace.” “Did he say anything?” “He couldn't bare said more if bo had been married to her.”—Detroit Free Press. Wine and the Bush. In olden times ivy bushes used to be hung over the doors of taverns as sign boards because the plant was sacred to Bacchus, the god of wine. It is not the insurrection of ignorance that is dangerous, but the revolts of intelligence.—Lowell. The Arrow of St. Edmund. $1851.91 Statement of General Fund from March July 3rd. 1917 $1851.91 21,1917, to RECEIPTS Balance in fund March 21... Receipts .............. .. ................... From County Treas ........ Taxes refunded......................... DISBURSEMENTS Salaries, Recorder, Health Officer, City Atty., Police. 187.50 Street lights and lamps...... 165.95 Mdse., rent, taxes.................. 396.57 July 3 balance in fund 929.82 _________ $179.4 $1679.84 Statement of Water Fund fror Mar July 3, 191 . r RECEIPTS Water receipts.................... .. From County Treas ......... . . 700.16 2205.84 DISBURSEMENTS March 21 deficit in fund $326.43 Supt. salary and labor 255.00 Distillate .......... 214.0 Labor and Drayage ..... 859.27 Merchandise................... ......... 384.33 Interest bonds......... . 750.00 July 3 bal. in fund 116.94 $2906 On Statement of Irrigation Fund fron to July 3, 1917. $2906.00 21. 1917, RECEIPTS March 21, bal in fund............. Irrigation receipts................... July 3, deficit......................... . $155.75 356.46 €6.84 DISBURSEMENTS Printing and stationery Mdse Labor U. S. R. S. water $578.05 Statement of Library Fund from March 21. 1917, to July 3. 1917 RECEIPTS March 21 bal. in fund.......... From Co. .. ............................... $438.39 187.92 DISBURSEMENTS Civic Center Assn. Salary Librarian Mdse........................... July 3 bal. in fund... 22.50 19.00 A4 534.17 8578.21 $576.31 Statement of Street Fund from March 21. 1917, to July 3.1917 RECEIPTS $400.58 March 21 bal. in fund.............. From Co. Treas ........................ DISBURSEMENTS Labor, drayage Mdse ............................ July 3. bal. In fund 8296 77 17.79 270.98 $584.54 $584.54 I, C. M. Jensen, Recorder of the City of Her. miston. do solemnly swear that the above state- mento are true and correct to the beet of my knowledge and belief. C. M. Jensen, City Recorder Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3rd day of July. 1817. Notary Public for Oregon (My commission expires June 10, 1921) NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior U. S Land Office at La Grande. Oregon. June 20th. 1917. Notice is hereby given that Peter Xedes, of Holdman. Oregon, who, on January 17th, 1913, made Homestead Entry No. 01 1495, for MH section 20. township 5 north, range 30 east Willamette Meridian, ha. filed notice of intention to make three-year proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before R. T. Brown, clerk of the County Court of Umatilla county, at his office at Pendleton. Oregon, on the 21st day of August, 1917. Claimant names as witnesses: Let Fraker. John The legend of the death of St. Ed Kerr. Gux Xedes and Walter Thorne, all of Hold Oregon. \ mund was curiously corroborated after man. 43-48 C. 3. DUNN. Register a lapse of eight centuries. The story goes that the martyr was tied to a Taken Up tree and, as torture proved unavailing to make him recant his faith, was shot has taken up and holds at his ranch one mile west at with Danish arrows till his body of Cold Springs dam, thefollowing described stock. 1 bay maro, wnight 1200 pounds, about 10 years was covered with them. The tree at old; no visible brand; right fore foot club. Hoxne to which be was said to have The above described property will be sold at auction to the highest bidder for cash in been bound and which was twenty public hand Monday. July 23, 1917, at 10:00 o’clock feet in circumference fell In 1848, and. a. m. at the above mentioned ranch, unless re according to "The Black Letter Saluta deemed by owner. adv42c T. E. Brassfield. of the Prayer Book.’* a piece of iron like an arrow head was found Imbed ded in the wood. Its Recommendation. “Do you recommend this book?" “Certainly.” answered the librarian. “It’s a book that every one ought to reed.” “But It shows very little handling. 1 don't believe it bas been taken out more than once or twice.” “Quite true,” answered the librarian, wearily. "That should convince you. uauaui, —9* st —49 worth VI madam, - that It is -- really while.’ | - Bir mingham Age-Herald. Ice Cream season is now here in ear- nest and wc are ready to serve you in any quan tity. Try us for your next party. No ReMary. that storekeeper.” “What’s the hitch ?" "Re told me to come in and tell him what I don't know, so he can tell me what he knows.” “That’s a fair exchange.”—Richmond Times Dispatch. Our Candies is unexcelled. Bulk can- dies handled by us are and purity as the box. Not Interesting. “That "Yes; All she ble she Kansas woman seemed to bore you." I'm baldheaded, as you see. could talk about was the trou- has In washing her hair.”— City Journal P. B. SISCEL