-
THE
HERALD,
HERMISTON
HERMISTON,
OREGON.
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THE
Published every Saturday at Hermiston, Umatilla County, Oregon, in the heart of Eastern
COAL SITUATION IS
ALARMING!
Oregon’s great irrigated alfalfa fields, by the Herald Publishing Company.
M. C. Athey, Editor
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Subscription Rates: One Year, $1.50; Six Months, 75c
HOW TO MAKE $4.00 AN HOUR
Farmers are busy this time of year.
And yet nobody is ever too busy to make more money.
If you are wasting time on a fifteen cent an hour job. when you might
be making $4 an hour you are not busy, you are merely fussing with
trivial details.
In short, how much paint is left on the weather side of your house?
It costs twice as much to build now as when you did.
Painted houses, and barns, last anyway twice as long as houses un
protected from the weather.
Two coats of paint on your house will save you more money than you
can make any other way in the saine time.
Averaging farmers the country over, their houses lack paint,
They think they are too busy to paint in the summer. and they can’t
paint in the winter.
But there is always time around the farm to make $4 an hour,
And $4 is an underestimate of what a job of paint makes for the
farmer.
Farmers think they are too busy to bring tools and implements under
cover.
Many times it is impossible at each week’s end to bouse all the im-
plements scattered over the farmstead.
But certainly in the fall all implements can be put under cover, and
through the summer some kind of covering should be provided to spread
over the most expensive machinery.
Farmers’ houses and tools last about half as long as they should be
cause they are not repainted, and not given ordinary protection from long
seasons of bad weather.
«
And when you paint remember that linseed oil and white lead are
the only things in paint worth having. The best system is to buy your
lead and oil and turpentine and do your own mixing; If not, get the best
paint you can find; cheap paint is a waste of time and cash.
The coal situation in the United States to
day is rapidly becoming alarming, it is im-
possible to secure mine labor. The car situa-
tion is becoming acute and of nation wide scope
with no immediate relief in sight. Due to the
long, hard winter, coal stocks of both commer
cial consumers and industrial users are depleted.
The situation is most unusual.
Freight rates advance soon
Mine rates are advancing.
Only 190 coaling days before
Christmas
Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co
Phone
HERALD
HERMISTON
Cover Your Car
Exposure and neglect reduces
the value of an automobile 25
per cent or more the first year.
Protection and care will materially lessen this
depreciation and double the life of your car.
PROTECTION SAVES
?
EXPENSES
Use the money you are paying for storage space
together with the money lost from neg
lect and build a well designed
and convenient
GARAGE OF YOUR
OWN
A PETTY GRAFT
111
R. A. BROWNSON, MANAGER
Pursuing a general policy of J. A. Folger & Co., of
San Francisco, Cal., we are permitted to present
FREE
TO EACH CUSTOMER WHO PURCHASES FIVE
' POUNDS OF
Golden Gate Coffee
ONE POUND FREE
With 2 1-2 pound can 1-2 pound free
This is saving you 65 cents on 5 pound purchases
and 32 1-2 cents on 2 1-2 pound purchases, or 13
cents per pound, making this coffee cheaper than
most of the inferior grades. This is your opportun- .
ity to save.
THIS SALE WILL BE FOR ONE WEEK
Saturday, June 12 to Saturday,
June 19, inclusive
We urge you to anticipate your coffee wants for
some time ahead.
Remember the dates—June 12 to June 19 inclu
sive.
REMEMBER THIS IS THE VERY HIGH
EST GRADE COFFEE ON THIS MAR
KET—NONE BETTER.
We see that Congress has reestablshed the free seed graft.
Graft is the only name we can give it.
The congressmen have found that packages of seeds, sent to the
thousand' town and city voters-in their selected list, are the cheapest ad
vertising they,can secure.
It is easier to let Uncle Sam buy a lot of cheap seeds in Europe whence
our seeds for this distribution have always come, wad them in a big en
velope, and drop them by the ton in the mail for Uncle Sam to carry free
of charge to a thousand office workers, who will never plant a grain of
them, than it is to write a letter telling constituents what Congress has
done for them; and decidedly less embarrassing.
Through the years we hate hopefully planted the seeds sent by mem
bers of Congress.
Way back in the parlous days of Cleveland we first began to plant.
We have planted Democratic seeds and Republican seeds; safe and
sane seeds, and pacifist seeds, and militaristic seeds, and free silver seeds,
and gold standard seeds, and high tariff seeds, and free trade seeds, and in
Just one particular did all these seeds agree; they uniformly, without hes
itation, or demur, stayed right where they were put.
A congressional seed never gets up early in the morning and greets
the rising sun.
No sir it stays right at home; it sulks until it rots, and no more
would a Washington, D. C. seed condescend to burst its mortal bounds and
send up a hopeful arm through the dark dirt to beckon to the skies, than
would the average M. C. give earnest thought and sensible consideration
to the urgent needs of American agriculture.
But if the congressmen imagine that the farmers of the co -intry are
still placid yokels, that accept any sort of political palaver as full payment
for their votes, they will be enlightened as rapidly as election time comes
’round.
The farmer today is really awake.
Inland Empire Lumber Company
Phone 331
" The Yard of Best Quality"
H. M. STRAW. MGR.
THE HIGH SCHOOL MOVIE
Elsie Ferguson
DON’T WASTE GASOLINE
The popularity of the automobile, the truck, and the tractor, has revo-
lutionined modern industry. If anything should happen to cut off the
supply of gasoline, the resulting inconvenience, loss and distress would
be as great as could be caused by a general strike on the railways. Hence
the fear alone of a shortage is enough to cause thinking people to give the
matter the gravest consideration..
Improved processess of cracking the molecules of crude oil have en
abled refiners very greatly to Increase the yield of gasoline per unit of
crude. Had this improvement not taken place, an acute condition would
long agu have overtaken the automobile Industry. The increasing use of
gasoline has already run ahead of the supply, and measures must be taken
to cut off waste. Every gallon wasted means that much potential power
evaporating without its doing a share of the world’s work.
WE’RE WITHYOU
In a recent communication from one of our correspondents, mention
is made concerning social activities of the rural districts and get-to
gether meetings that bring neighbors closer together.
Meetings where
"music, social pleasantries, and patriotic endeavors should be encouraged
to the exclusion of ‘cliquey’ functions; project farmers need recreation of
a cooperative nature,” are the thoughts brought out by our correspondent.
The Herald would like to cooperate and do all in Its power to make
meetings or social gatherings of this nature a success. We firmly believe
in this sort of recreation. It makes us broader minded; makes us think
more about our neighbors and their welfare, and gives us all good whole-
some amusement.
Let's have more of ’em.
Hermiston Produce & Supply Co.
V
An Artcraft Masterpiece
SATURDAY, JUNE 19
JACK P ickford
in
"Bill Apperson’s Boy”
FIRST NATIONAL RELEASE
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23
The Herald will give a years subscription to the one sending us the best
answer to the following question: “What's a Republican Convention In
Chicago."
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Full Line of Ladies’ Shoes =
Full Line of Girls’ and Boys’
and Small Children’s Shoes.
=
The Oak Tan Shoe Store repairing la sufficiently
prepay them back to you on short notice.
The Oak Tan Shoe Store
Sam Rodgers, Proprietor
Hermiston. Oregon
=
= =
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PURE HAWAIIAN CANE MOLASSES
“SHADY BROOK"
75 PER CENT ALFALFA MEAL — 2S PER CENT MOLASSES
C. S. MCNAUGHT CO.. HERMISTON, ORE.
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CHURCH NOTICES
Baptist Church
EVERY SUNDAY
10 a. m. Bible School classes for
all grades and ages. A. E. Bensel,
Superintendent.
11 a. .m. Sermon. Pastor.
7:15 p m. Young Peoples’ meeting
8 p. m. Preaching and song service
Mid-week.
Prayer,
conference
and Bible study on Thursday even
ing.
Cordial welcome extended to all.
IRA DAVID HALL. Pastor.
Phone 207
Christian Science
Services. 11 a. m.
M. R. Gallaher, Pastor
MACK'S HALL
Sunday School, 10 a. m.
Preaching, 11 a. m.
Epworth League, 7 p. m.
Preaching. 8 p. m.
COLUMBIA SCHOOL
Sunday School, 2 p. m.
Preaching. 3 p. m.
UMATILLA
Sunday School. 10 a. m.
Preaching Thursday, S p. m.
Catholic Church
THE CHURCH
The church is a religious home,
a sanctuary for worship, a school
for religious instruction, a fighting
unit for the new world that is build-
ing. It is a social center of the high-
est type, since it gathers into rela
tions of mutual helpfulness people
of every age and condition, and
since it adds to the attractions of the
ordinary club the power of religion
and the generous sympathies of the
altruistic impulse. The church is
the moat broadening and catholic
organisation among men, since ita
vision is to the ends of the world
whither the gospel is being carried,
and since its citizenship is in
Heaven as well as in the earth.
—Worth M. Tippy.
Suttles Lake Irrigation
Reports from Central Oregon are
to the effect that the Suttles Lake
Irrigation project has a good chance
of getting construction started this
summer. The project embraces sev-
eral thousand aerea and the storage
SEE
HITT
.1. Hirel
CONFECTIONERY
STATIONERY
-FOR-
Onna
GUNS
Jnmttain
All Popular Soft
‘Drinks
ICE CREAM
AMMUNITION
A FULL UNE
Hermiston 10:30 a. tn.
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