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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1919)
THE HERMISTON HERALD, The Hermiston Herald ON BEING DISAGREEABLE. Issued Each Saturday by The Marion Star asks the question, | "Can a disagreeable man be good?" M. D. O’CONNELL OREGON and then leaves the question unan- HERMISTON | swered. This is not right for so entered as second class | thoughtful a paper as the Star, to 1906, al the postoflice »I Hermiston, Oregon Men ve the question floating In the air. SUBSCRIPTION RATES 150 But It is quite certain that the sug 1.00 gestion of the question furnishes the ; One year ___ _Six months ............. .............. ----------- presumption of s negative answer and u ...a ” . . ! Subscriptions must be paid in advance. A CAR of the famous good. What a world of sweetness and light this would be if everybody would recognize that fact, and find the road to goodness In being agreeable, says Ohio State Journal. The doctrine would be truer than one could find in any moral philosophy. Evil and pet- ulance grow from the same bad root and they are sure to blend in human experience. So that every person who finds he is disagreeable may well ejac- ulate, "Hold there. I’m bad.” Of LUMP COAL Saturday and Monday | | | I THE INDIAN AND THE WAR. Few of us realize to what extent the 1 American Indian responded to the call | of freedom In the great war. Indian Commissioner Sells In his annual re- 1 port. Informs us that out of 33,000 | eligibles 9,000 were accepted In the | army and navy. Our own native In- | dian has no peer as a lover of liberty. ! Always has he bitterly resented the In- ; fluence that forced upon him the harsh laws of the conqueror. Never has he failed to fight for that liberty and free- Recent years dom so dear to him. have seen a great change In the atti- tude of our native Americans. They hnve come to regard our government as their government; our America as their America. And at no times hnve they responded more readily to the call of the Great Red Chieftain than now they have responded to the white, says New Orleans Item. It was but natural that the call of freedom deeply touched their patriotic hearts. To them there was but one answer. They desired It, their women demanded IL Their deeds on the battlefields of France do full honor to their tradi- tions. As one member of a famous Sioux family remarked : “We are Americans, loyal Americans, and proud to fight under the Stars and Stripes.” Storage price $10.00 Per Ton R. A. BROWNSON Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co advertising RATES 17 AIR SERVICE OF ARMY. The air service of the United States army offers wonderful possibilities at the present time. The airplane’s de velopment Is In the future; the past will be as nothing compared to Its accomplishments in the years to come. Today we are following with eager interest the arrangements for the proposed transatlantic flight. A new employment, airplane mechanics, will be In evidence. They will have to be the best and will, therefore, com mand the highest wages. When your automobile has “trouble" you stop and fix it. If your future airship mal- functions you will have to reach the ground before you stop. Before flying, therefore, a machine must be thor oughly tested In every part to see that everything Is right. The man who en lists In the air service of the United States army today will go Into It at a time w hen Its development Is to be the greatest, says Portland Express. He will become familiar with everything concerning the science and at the end of his three years’ period of enlist ment will come out of it a superme- chanic. in addition, he will be able to embark In the airplane profession at a time when the flying era will be in its infancy, and he can grow up with IL By turning on the lights morning and night, poultry men have found a way to make the hens lay a lot more eggs than they used to. ‘The COUNTRY GENTLEMAN is turning on the light, too, these days— lights on better farming methods, bet ter marketing plans, better get-together ideas, better homes. And in this sec tion its light is shining brighter and brighter—for it’s reaching more friends every week. or saved them a hundred dollar* ! Yet for only one dollar you can know THE COUNTRY GENTLE- MAN, just as a lot of other progressive farmers hereabout* know it. Once you read it you'll never be without it again. Your subscription will start with next week’s is- sue, if you— An optimist may be defined as a type of cheerful Idiot who confidently be lieves that humanity will ultimately emerge from the sea of piffle In which It is floundering tn time to be saved by the pul motor. A distinguished woman educator says she would like to spend her last night on earth seeing “Hamlet.” Well, after some performances of "Hamlet” we have endured death would have come as a blessed benison. The meanest and ornerlest cynics we know of are the chaps who sneer, "all camouflage" when they hear a good citizen praised for his patriotic and liberal war record. Notice for Publication. Not Coal Land Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, June 5, 1919. Noticeis hereby given that Clyde C. D. Hebert, of Hermiston, Oregon, who. on April 21st, 1915. made Homestead Entry No. 014601, for SE% NEY. N‘ SEM. SEK SEK. Cec. 24, Township 4N„ Range 28, E., Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three- year Proof, to'establish claim to the land above described, before R. T. Brown, Clerk of the Circuit Court, at Pendleton. Oregon, on the 14th day of August, 1919. Claimant names as witnesses: C. C. Mason, John Mason, Jacob L. Stork, all of Hermiston, Oregon, and H. Martin, of Stanfield, Oregon. May 14. C. S. Dunn, Register. ED. H. GRAHAM Phone 581 Hermiston, Oregon An authorized subscription representative of The Country G en tle man Theladies'H me Journal n ««•-*!. n The Saturday Evening Rost AUTOMOBILE SERVICE All kinds of Automobile and Gas I I i i 1 | I i ' i Í I i | I . ; Engine Repair Work. ALL WORK GUARANTEED | i CIVE US A TRIAL | ; I I — • K ei i berge R LAYS GARAGE HERMISTON.ORE 2 1 ) I have purchased the property first door east of Warner’s law | office on Main street and remodeled the building commensurate | with the future method of conducting the "Oak Ten Shoe Store." We hope to make It a pleasure for the public to trade here, 1 where they will get “honest goods at honest prices.” The Oak Tan Shoe Store repairing is sufficiently well known I ‘ and proven to need no comment. Send your orders by mail or ex- press and we will prepay them bock to you on short notice. A full line of men and boys’ guaranteed All-Leathei Shoes— both work and dress—that will besold to you if you investigate when in need of foot wear. The Famous "Florshelm” you all weil \ I know. The Oak Tan Shoe Store1 Sam Rodgers, Proprietor Hermiston, Oregon | MODERN PROGRESS The most wonderful achievement of modern times is the crossing of the Atlantic in 30 hours by airship guided by "YANKEE GRIP” Hold air in your tubes and cases with it permanently A Jiffy—A Penny—Any Time—Any Where At accessory dealers only. or THE CITY or HERMISTON Statement of the fund balances as of May 21st, 1919. Name of Fund Debit Credit $468.87 General fund Water fund $229.34 112.71 ... 130.92 No. 1... .. No. 2. Library fund ................... Street fund Treasurer's cash Irrigation Dist. Irrigation Diet. Accessory Dealers' in Hermiston: Pendleton Motor Co. Lays’ Garage Hermiston, Hermiston, Ore. Ore. 02.98 72.92 Economy Product* Co.. Tacoma, Wash. 471.80 t 944.77 $ 944.77 Statement of General Fund from Feb. 1st. 1919. to May 21st, 1919 RECEIPTS Balance in fund Feb. 1 Licenses ...................... From County Treas $ 113.55 31.00 971 08 DISBURSEMENTS Salaries, Recorder. City Atty.. Police. Fire Dept Street lights and lamps Labor, drayage...................... Miscellaneous......................... 232.00 Columbia Highway Garage PHONE 241 WEST SIDE 285.00 22.00 107.76 Agents for 646.76 May 21 balance in fund 468.87 $1115.63 31115.63 International, Liberty and Briscoe Statement of Water Fund from Feb. 1,1919, to May 21, ISIS TERMS RECEIPTS Water collections From County Treas May 1st deficit 827.07 1647.32 General Line of 2474.39 Accessories and Auto Supplies 229.34 2703.73 REASONABLE PRICES-QUICK WORK DISBURSEMENTS Supt, salary.................... $ 350.00 Distillate .......................... 367 19 Labor and Drayage ...... 203.30 Merchandise . .......... 424.93 Bond coupons (Interest) 750.00 And all with a guarantee Gasoline Free Air 2095.42 ____ When green soldiers are about to re- ceive their baptism of fire their officers tell them that the enemy Is just as much afraid as they can be. That la the advice which Charles T. Clayton of the department of labor gives to American manufacturers who hesitate to go ahead because wages and raw material* are high, says New York Commercial. They are relatively as a . Accept No Other—GET IT .. 608.31 War revealed an astonishing condi- $2703.73 $2703.73 tion In many parts of the United States which the bureau of naturali- Statement of Irrigation Fund No. 1 from Feb. 1. 1819, to May 21. 1919. xation, department of labor, has just RECEIPTS made public. A statement by the Assessments 675.26 bureau dealing with the growth of May 21 deficit $ 112.71 DISBURSEMENTS foreign Institutions In America fol- U. S. R. S. water ......... $ 169.50 lows ; "Section after section of the Labor, drayage 207.80 Merchandise 121.8» country has been disclosed as being Printing ...... 167.90 under the domination not of Ameri- Feb. 1 deficit S 120.28 can Institutions of government, but of 787.97 787.97 the most inimical forms of foreign au- tocracy. In many cities children by Statement of Library Fund from Feb. 1. 1919, to May 41 1919 the thousands have been found who RECEIPTS have not been allowed the inherent 1 Feb 1 bat in fund $215.66 | County Treas $08.85 right to speak In the schools of their DISBURSEMENTS training in the English tongue. They Salary Librarian 103.05 have been taught a foreign language, Labor, drayage 278.83 They have been disciplined for fail- May 21 bal. 102.98 lire to use the foreign tongue. They $524.51 have been trained to sing the patri- $524.51 | otic airs of countries other than the Statement of Street Fund from Feb 1. 1919, to country of their birth. They have May 21. 191» RECEIPTS been taught so thst they would grow Feb 1 sal $738.06 up to a firm conviction that righteous DISBURSEMENTS government alone could be achieved ------------- $296.05 Merchandise 69.09 by some other form than that which Is here created and carried on by all of May XL bal. us." I Recorder’s Financial Report Feb. 1. deficit Send M j Your Dollar TODAY inser each Display-One time, 25 cents per inch; two tions, 20 cents per inch per insertion; monthly rates, 15 cents per meh per issue. Reader*“’Firn insertion, 10 cents per linei subsequent insertion without change of copy, 5 cents per line- course If he does not object to being bad he will keep on being disagree- able. There is a finer issue In these problems than In the gulf stream or the habitability of Mars. They touch life as closely as a storm at night. on the track No farmer makes any mis- 1 take when he subscribes for TUR COUNTRYGEN- TLKMAN. When he gives me ■ dollar and says: "Put my name on the list for a year's subscription” he gets the fifty-two big- gest and best farm-paper issues he ever saw. V/hy, farmer* have found that * single article* have made 'SHOE for MEN -at a —agreeable person cannot be | KEMMERER Turn On the Light! HERMISTON, OREGON: Turner & Caldwell WEST SIDE PROPS- PHONE 241 LIFE 1---------------------------- FIRE AUTO I INSURANCE J. H. YOUNG, AGENT ELECTRIC FIXTURES AND APPLIANCES Phone 139 203 a. court at. Pendieton, Ore Ask Your Boy When the fighting was thickest— When the suffering was greatest— Where was the Salvation Army Lassie? 1919 to May 21, HU He’ll say: "She was right on the job” 73.60 Oct. 31. deficit And now. back home in the byways and hidden places —where misery always lives, where a mother needs a home where men. women and children are on the downgrade, she's still -RIGHT ON THE JOB." I high or higher Itt England, but British HELP HER TO CARRY ON manufacturers are attacking foreign | trade problems In earnest, knowing | that the who le world needs merchan- THE SALVATION ARMY HOME SERVICE FUND JUNE 22 TO 30 ■