Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1920)
e ■ THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. 3IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIÍIIIIIUUHII',: sley Mercantile Co “The House of Quality and Service” HERMISTON. E ; a LOCALS : ûtiumiiiNHiiiiiiiiiimi James E. Watson passed several days of this week in Portland. The quality of the Merchandise we handle is shown below; Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Green have a new baby boy, born to them Sunday, February 15, 1920. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lloyd re turned Saturday, after passing most of the winter in Spokane. Mrs. George Ganey was in town Monday from Stanfield having den ial work done by Dr. Prime. Stetson Hats.’For Men Who Care” — Leonard Swett is here from Port land visiting with his sister, Mrs. F. D. Stanley on the West Side. iery - VEGETABLES Ed. Miles, proprietor of the Pio- neer barber shop of this city. has been quite ill with the flu this week. F RUTS Kingsley Mercantile Co The House of Quality and Service” Phone 171 11 A. M Mrs. Joyce Hays of Pendleton i ted se venal days last week at the home of Mrs. H. G. Newport. Two Deliveries Daily 4 P. M Carl Brownell, foreman of the Pendleton Auto Co. at Pendleton, was a West End visitor last Sunday. Miss Catherine Priegnitz was here several days this week from Stan field as the guest of Miss Edile Johnson. There’s None Better HOME MADE SAUSAGE P. B. Slacci was called to Wasco, Ore., Monday because of the serious illness of his nephew, Harold Sis- cel, from pneumonia. Home Cured HAMS AND BACON 8 - WE CARRY FRUITS AND VEGETABLES CITY MEAT MARKET PHELPS CASH GROCERY The Monopole Store Phone 413 "MONOPOLE" goods are first-class in every respect — fag Our Guarantee Back of Every Purchase Royal Bakery Goods from Portland Cakes, Doughnuts, Rolls, etc., Wednesdays and Saturdays Afternoon Delivery to Any Part of City £ Vegetables Tuesdays and Fridays Big Tractor Demonstration fry FEBRUARY 25 I Showing the tractor for small farm work. See rtisement. Place of demonstration can m us on or after Monday, February 23rd. is, — EVERY FARMER INVITED Phone 671 1 Manure goes farther and does more good when you use a John Deere Spreader. You can spread manure evenly, heavy or light—no Mounting the the axle of the J gives you a comb advantages you in any other spr this to | do i of get We Have a Machine Set Up for Your Inspection . ’ . • con Hermiston Cooperative j ... SPRING MILLINERY Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Schilling are rejoicing over the arrival of a baby boy, born Sunday, February 15, 1920, at St. Anthony's hospital Pendleton. At the Thomas Shop Now on display all the season’s newest creations in Col. J. K. Shotwell, highway con tractor, who is now completing the street work in Hermiston, returned Monday from a several days' busi ness trip to Portland. omen s an Mrs. F. L. Kelley left Sunday for The Dalles, where she will make an extended visit with friends and rela tives. Mr. Kelley will Join her there next week, and from there they will go to Portland for a visit. - Miss Esther Sholin. fifth grade teacher, was absent from her duties several days this week on account <>f illness. During her sickness Miss Portha MeKeen substituted for her. Another substitute teacher is Mrs. Lloyd, who la teaching the eighth t. Anthony's hospital in Pendleton. pel We invite your inspection when in our city k * W. W. Baker, a brother of Chas, E. Baker, former editor of The Herald but now one of the projects leading farmers, was here on a short visit a few days ago. The gentle- man la representing the Lowell Law Book Publishing Co. In the north- west, with headquarters in Los Angeles. - Children’s Hats Mr. and Mrs. Dan Cook, who pass ed several weeks visiting at the ranch home of their daughter, Mra. J. C. Mathison, left Saturday night for Spokane, from where they will return to their home in Greenwood. Fred Barnhart called to. Pendleton the latter t of last week on receipt of news of the death of his mother, who was buried in that eity Tuesday of this week. De- ceased had been a resident of East ern Oregon for 16 years, coming here from Indiana. Ta : PENDLETON, ORE, 725 MAIN Mrs. A. E. McFarland of Umatilla, wife of the proprietor of the largest dairy ranch in the West End of the county, was a visitor Monday of this week in Hermiston. Mr. and Mrs. M. Duty, old time residents of this project who have been gone several months to points In Washington state seeking restor- at ion to health for Mrs. Duty, re- turned to Hermiston last Sunday to remain for a time. 2— it Frank Vernon, former resident of, Hermiston, has” returned from a sev eral months visit with friends in different parts of Missouri. Heider 9-16 or 12-20 Tractors SAPPERS’ INC Come in and B spreader. We show you why better work, why longer than othe will cost less fb and why it is eas and operate. ................. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Pierson and son Jesse left Monday morning for Nice, Ore., there to remain a short time visiting friends. Wisconsin. 4) under-fertilized or over-fer tilized spots. Ask any user of the John Deere Spreader, and he will tell you it is the best ma chinery investment he ever made—not only because it saves hard work and valu able time, but because it makes every forkful of manure count for a bigger crop yield. OREGON HARDWARE & IMPLEMENT CO We now have in quantity They are the finest in this class of meats ever put on display in Hermiston. Try them once and you will be satisfied with their appetizing flavor. The Best Machinery Investment You Can Make Come in and know the reatone why many aatufied u»en of John Deere Miss Fannie Todd is absent from her duties in the Hermiston Pro duce and Supply Co. this week on account of illness. Rev. M. R. Gallaher returned from Athena Monday, where he had been holding revival meetings for the past three weeks. •••••••• and Poultry schools are to be established 'n Wasco counts by the Wasco County Poultry association according to plans ormulated by the executive committee, it Is planned to have six schools in various pans of the county which will e instructed by prominent poultry ex- erts. A record price for standing timber was offered at the government sale of 10,000,000 feet of white pine on the lamath Indian reservation, the high idder, I. H. Larkey, bidding $6.33 per 000 feet, and $2.82 per 1000 feet rental or the Kirk sawmill, where the timber vill be manufactured. Predatory animats numbering 3216 vere killed by the 58 men and women imployed by the United States bio- ogical survey in Idaho, Washington and Oregon during the six months end- ‘ng December 31, Stanley Jewett, in- ipector in charge with headquarters at Pendleton, announced. In case all the millage tax measures to be submitted to the voters of Ore jón at the special election to be held on May 21 are approved, the state tax levy next December will exceed the levy made in December, 1919, by more than 100 per cent, according to state officials who have given the pro posed laws careful study and consider- ation. _______________ The Herald prints letter heads. , ___ Campbell Millinery ROSE CAMPBELL I and also provides for the substitution" lof the taxing power of the district in lieu of the existing liens by indi- Notice is hereby given that a spe vidual contracts and other provis- cial election will be held within the ions, which said contract in full may Irrigon and Boardman be Seen by any landowner or other precincts of Irrigon within the West Extension Irriga- person interested at the office of the tion District on Tuesday, the twenty- district tn the U. S. Reclamation fourth day of February, 1920, be- Service building at Hermiston, Ore- tween the hours of eight o’clock in con. In the office of J. G. Camp at the morning and five o'clock in the Irrigon. Oregon, and in the office of afternoon of said day for the pur- Emmett Callahan at Boardman. Ore pose of determining whether or not gon At said election the ballot that certain contract between the shall contain the words "‘Contract United States of America and the with the United States—Yes,” and West Extension Irrigation District "Contract with the United States— approved by the Board of Directors No.” The school house at Boardman and filed In the office of the Board and the Reclamation Office at Irri- at Hermiston, Oregon, on the sixth gon, within said district, are hereby day of January, 1920, shall be au designated as the polling places for thorised and entered into by the the purpose of said election, and Board of Directors, and which said George Rand and R. L Wisdom and contrast sets forth the maximum Merrill Doble have been appointed amount of money payabie to the judges of election for Irrigon pre- cinct, and A. W Cobb and C. C. pone or in the assumption of lia- Paine and T K Burns have been baity for district lands for such pur- appointed judges of election for peer, of veualties and in- Boardman precinct within said dis- terert, in the amount of $1,100,000, I trict. NOTICE BERTHA TURNER This notice 1 pursuant to ar of Directors of the Went Extension Irrigation District, made and enter ed on the sixth day of January, 1920. J. G. CAMP, Jan. 24-Feb. 21. Secretary. Ne. 015125. BUTTER WRAPPERS—W SELL THEM ALL PRINTED. 1