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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1920)
$$ and Cents Saved Hundreds of our patrons have learned of the ECONOMY we are showing them. PREPARATIONS PROSPECTIVE TOURIST SHOULD MAKE TO INSURE SAFE VOYAGE $ RDLTPY FACTS— s s They have compared our prices with others and without exception have found our prices to be the lowest in considera tion of the quality of our merchandise. TWO BREEOS IN SAME FLOCK Stop, Look and Buy fans thnt they double the volume of air passing through the radiator, keep- Ing the engine cooler In summer. • • • What, asks Motor Age, has become of the old fashioned motorist who wiped his feet before getting Into his car? asked in the United States. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Can Lye .... Brooms...... Comb Honey Beans, 10 lbs Coffee______ Sugar_______ --10c $1.15 ..35c --96c ..39c -26c '... tes SUGAR TO ARRIVE SOON E Economy Gash Store E While keeping two distinct breeds of poultry in one yard without mix ing the breeds seems difficult, it can be accomplished easily and with satis factory results, as shown by the ac count of an experience Just received from a New England poultry raiser. One of the kinds kept Is a so-called egg breed, the other being a general- purpose variety of poultry. The method of preventing crossing Is as follows: One year, roosters of the egg-laying breed are retained and used for breed ing, no other males being kept. The interior of Main Body of Car Arranged for Sleeping Compartment. Where Cash Beats Credit HERMISTON ECHO Alfalfa Lands For Sale!! 80 Acres of alfalfa land. 48 acres now producing alfalfa. All tools and equipment go with this place at a bargain, $12,500. 40 Acres of alfalfa landunimproved. A splendid by at $5,000. 40 Acres of alfalfa land, 14 acres in all'alfa... Small farm tools go with place. Good house and barn. $4,000. 20 Acres unimproved alfalfa land, $2,500. 66 Acres alfalfa land, 18 acres in alfalfa good house and barn, $6000 Under the title "High, Low and the Game,” Edwin L. Sabin, In MoToR, the national magazine of motoring, writes most entertainingly nnd helpfully of transcontinental motoring und what preparations the prospective tourist should make to insure a safe and pleasant voyage, “Tires?” questions the author, and answers: “Any driver who starts out equipped with less than n complete outfit of the best new casings that his money will buy gives a hostage to fortune. This may sound a bit ex travagant, but I’ll leave the decision to the army sky-pilot whom we passed stranded with two bare rims and a family upon the desert 100 miles from any supply station, or to the suppos edly experienced traveling man who had been working for 12 hours at a dobe shack trying to adjust a bor- rowed 33 straight side casing on a 84 clincher wheel, while awaiting succor from a 50-miles-distant garage.” Spade Is Handy Tool. Gently Insinuating that the trans continental motorist may possibly have to remove n bit of soil on occa sion, our author continues: "Spade! Man, man ! Don’t forget your wife, but for the love of Mike, don’t forget a short-handled spade and a couple of boards, likewise a slab or two upon which to base the Jack. Where there lire miles and miles of sand and shifty gravel, and six Inches of either applied Just right will stall a car till the grass grows In waste places, It appears idi otic to advise overlanders to pack a spade and adjuncts. Nevertheless a man there was—from Wyoming, too, of all ranges, who seized upon that spade as a great invention.” 100 Acres alfalfa land. 48 acres irrigable, 18 acres now in alfalfa. Everything goes with the place. EASY TERMS COME AND LET US SELL YOU A HOME. One of the best rules for keeping a car out of the repair shop is the proper use of lubricants. • • * It Is claimed for the new multiblade American motor cars sell in Vene- Crossing Is Prevented by Keeping rucia at prices ranging from SO to Male of One Breed One Year and 100‘ per cent more than the prices Another the Next. YOU ARE WELCOME 2 lbs. Creamery Butter .. .... -__________ _ $1.18 Rose Brand Oranges, doz........................... 79c Palm Olive Soap._____ 10c Stock Salt, 50 lbs............. 55c AUTOMOBILE MhFNTSA, The Problems of Today Dr. Thomas A. Boyer Presents Them In Stirring Lecture at Chautauqua REAL ESTATE Baordman, Oregon We are Compelled to Announce that ■ On and After July 1 9 It Is advisable to clean and readjust the spark plug occasionally. The points wear away gradually and If net readjusted, cause irregular firing. PROMINENT WRITER AND POET AT CHAUTAUQUA Marshall Louis Mertins Comes on Last Afternoon. Author, lecturer, humorist and staff poet of the Kansas City Star, Mar shall Louis Mertins, who comes to Chautauqua on the last afternoon, has made a decided Impression In the lec ture and literary fields of today. He discusses his subjects with the eager- eent gore : . : ats I First Prize White Rock Cockerel. following year roosters of only the general-purpose stock are kept. The difference In the color of eggs of the two breeds selected is so great that hatching eggs have always been select ed with a certainty as to the breed laying them. The plan necessitates in troducing new males, but the advan tages of keeping the blood lines of two breeds separate outweigh the slight cost of purchasing the males. The de partment of agriculture points out that when this method Is followed on two neighboring farms an exchange of roosters might readily be arranged. ness and optimism of youth, yet he la a deep student and a consistent think- The "ladles’ baseball team" is anoth er. and his addresses bear the stamp er of the misnomers. I of the man who haa mastered his sub ject. The average man Isn’t looking for Into bls lecture, “Rich Man, Poor Justice. What he wants Is sympathy. Man, Beggar Mao. Thief," he weaves a world of humor and brightens his Next to the perfumed man, the half- splendid inspirational subject with burned dead cigar probably Is the most poems from his latest book, "The Su offensive odor. i mac Trail.” Stanfield, July 5, 6, 7. 8. In the case of the cabaret performer tho extenuating circumstance is that Subscribe for The Herald. ho makes a living at It. 1920, The Hermiston Jackson and Bodkin, enterprising farinera on the project, shipped a load of hogs to Portland by boat on June 7, and dropped in at Brownell’s Store.' Herald will raise the All Farmers of the Project Are Cordially Invited to Drop In at Brownell’s Store When in Town ubscription price to $2.00 a year Subscribe this month and save 50c “What Time Is It and Where Are We" Is the subject of Dr. Thomas A. Boyer’s splendid lecture which will be given before Chautauqua audiences on the third night. He discusses ably the vital problema of today and to morrow and offers sane, sensible solutions to many of the harassing ques tions of the day. Dr. Boyer Is credited with being one of the greatest lecturers of the West He is truly a remarkable platform orator and humorist The Syracuse (N. Y.) Standard calls him “the prince of eloquent speakers.” He brings to Chau tauqua one of the cardinal features of the four days and every person In the community should hear him. BRING YOUR FARM PRODUCE AND MEATS BROWNELL’S STORE Umatilla, Oregon NOW $1.50 Fun-Maker at Chautauqua - : ■ Oregon Normal School Subscription Blank .... —--------- .... — Infairination Extension of the Oregon Normal Summer School to held at PENDLETON For Six Weeks Beginning June 21, 1920. Arrangements have been made whereby an extension of the Ore gon Normal School will be held at Pendleton for six weeks, begin- ning June 21. 1920. The faculty will be composed of members of the Date.................................-................... The Hermiston Herald, regular Oregon Normal School Faculty and other excellent instruct- bra. Special methods in the different subjects for ail the grades from one to eight Inclusive will be given as well as methods for rural schools. , Hermiston, Oregon. Gentlemen : ' Please find enclosed $. to tke Herald. If you are in arrears, you may pay up to date and add another year at the old price of $ 1.50 a year. for subscription If you arc paid in advance, you may add another year to your subscription for $1.50 Signatare.... Watch for S. Platt Jones, the man that’s going to “start something” on | the second night of the Chautauqua. Jones is that indescribable sort that a ! Chautauqua’s most Jovial prince of refined fun. 8. Platt Jones is a prodigal | or droil mimicry. He gets under the crust. He "gets" every one, from the very young to the very old. Cha uaugus will be held at Stanfield, July 5, 6, 7, and 8. Those wishing to take the elementary teachers’ training course may take the six weeks at Pendleton and then six weeks at Mon- mouth, beginning Aug. 2, or the full twelve weeks may be taken at Monmouth. The same credits will be given for work taken as is given in the Summer School at Monmouth. For Information regarding places to live In Pendleton, applicants should write to Supt. E. E. Inlow, the director of the Pendleton Summer School. | | | | |