The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, July 02, 1920, Image 5

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    HERALD,
HERMISTON,
OREGON.
BIG FUSS OVER SMALL FOX
SAVING
Are you saving a few of those cheap dollars each
month?
As conditions advance to normal the buying power
of a dollar will increase.
Every dollar saved now will be worth two eventually
I
First National Bank
OF HERMISTON
Dr. Freeze makes
STRAYED OR STOLEN
regular visits to Her­
Strayed—From Umatilla April 15.
miston. Consult him
gray filly, branded TZ on left
free and be assured of one
hip. Notify owner, C. E. Smith,
good eye service.
38
Umatilla, Ore.
* 32tfc
SWWedeoececodoreoung
WANT ADS.
MISCELLANEOUS
Ready cut houses. C.W. La Barr, tfc
You’ve something you don’t want,
corucurorocererecezerezecerezen IF why
not advertise it for sale
y
Y
or. trade. Try 'er once and see,
WANTED
how quick you get rid of it. 42-tfc
WANTED—Castings to weld. Max­
field & Rhodes Bros.
40-tfc WHITE DRESS SKIRTS—Ladies and
childrens White and Colored Voile
WANTED—Any kind of barn that
Dresses arriving daily. Mrs. A. S.
can be moved. Inquire at this of-,
Johnson.
.
42-2tp
fice.
40-44-P
HOLSTEIN Bull for service at the
Wanted—Your subscription for
Norquist ranch.
*
42-4tp
The American Boy, $2.50 year. Ed
M. Graham..
Itfc MILK RECORDS—Do you keep a
record of your milk, if so, milk
Wanted—Your subscription for
records are for sale at the Herald
office.
42-tfc
The Saturday Evening Post, $2.50;
The Ladies Home Journal, $2.00;
The Country Gentleman, $1.00. Ed. FOUND—On the Diagonial road, a
gold watch and chain. Party los­
H. Graham, Hermiston, Ore. 3Stfc.
ing such an article, come to this
office, describe the property, pay
or this ad, and thank Henry Som­
FOR SALE
merer for bringing it in, and get
it.
42-tfc
FOR SALE—Improved 20 acre farm,
one mile north of Hermiston. O.
’TAINT no use keepin’ somethin' you
D. Burgess.
42-tfc
don't need. Maybe somebody else
could use it and would be willin'
FOR SALE—One Chevrolet Baby
to pay somethin’ for it. Let ’em
Grand, terms, also one Ford Tour­
know what you don’t want thru
ing, first class condition, new tires
these columns. Everybody reads
all around, demountable rims.
the classified column just like you
' Umatilla Motor Sales Co., Lays’
are doing now.
42-tfc
Garage.
42-2tc
Fire Insurance, Notary Public and
FOR SALE—Team mares, weight
2700, with new wagon and breech­ typewriting and stenographic work.
ing harness. H. E. Potter, 21 See Edile M. Johnson at Dodd’s
miles north.
• 41-tfc
office.
3tfc
CHERRIES for sale—8c pound. C.
Spices and Extracts for the House­
E. Cleveland, Stanfield, Or. 41-2tp
wife—in i fact everything in the
FOR SALE—Young registered Jersey Watkins line. Mail your orders, or
bull. C. E. Cleveland, Stanfield, call at my home, one door east of
Tum-a-Lum lumber yard in Hermis­
Oregon.
41-2tp
ton, Ore., and make your selections.
lltfc
FOR SALE—20 yearling and two- W. A. Mikesell.
year old half breed ewes. C. E.
Cleveland, Stanfield, Ore. 41-2tp
If you want to sell your land or
GAS ENGINE FOR SALE—My 6 H.
home write to us and we will
P. Fairbanks-Morse gas engine
call on you and make arrange­
for sale. Heavy type H. Tn good
ments. We make quick sales.
good condition. Just overhauled.
Oregon-Washington Ranches Co.
Never has done heavier work than
Bowman hotel bldg., Pendleton,
to run a pump jack on well. Have
Oregon, Box 513, Phono 542.
bought smaller engine so don't
need this. Can be seen at Oregon
Hardware & Imp. Co., store. J. --------------------- z
Real Estate—C. W. LaBarr.
tfc
D. Watson.
41-4tc
FOR SALE—One portable four panel M. F. WHITE, Architect, Box 583.
3 7-tfc
pig pen. O. G. Sapper.
41-2tc
FOR SALE—One team weight 3200 GET your coal early. Let me haul
it. T. L. Hall, Phone 192. 39-tfc
pounds, four years old, no blem­
ishes, also harness. . $400.00.
For Schweizer’s Imported high
Phone Echo 18R14 or call on Al­
grade exclusive dress materials and
ton Basey, Lower Butter Creek.
41-tfc embroideries for spring and summer
see Mrs. Burgess.
• 22tfc
REGISTERED Jersey bull for sale
Going to build? Then get my
or trade for A 1 milch cow, G. D.
prices on ready cut lumber for any
Genn, Route 1, Hermiston, Ore.
41-3tp kind of a house. Write me, I will
call. C. W. LaBarre.
29tfc
FOR SALE—2 room house 20x24.
T. L. Hall Transfer—City and
Can be moved easily. J. S. Dyer.
41-tfc country hauling. Leave orders at
Elliott’s Tire Shop. Phone 192. ,30tfc
FOR SALE—2 beds complete. 3
See Bennett for autioneering. 16tfc
tables, 2 rugs 9x12 and 8x10. 1
Singer sewing machine, oil lamps,
all kinds. Mrs. W. J. Warner.
Elliott’s Tire Shop.
♦
41-tfc
Fire Insurance in three strong
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE—Two
good Jersey cows; 3 Du roc Jersey companies. See Edile M. Johnson at
3tfc
sow pigs, 6 months old; Stude­ Dodd's office.
baker 7 passenger car. Will con­
sider improved land. Inquire at
LABOR BIGGEST PROBLEM
this office.
40-42-p
FARM PRACTICE IS NEXT
FOR SALE—A good young team, no
- —----
reasonable price refused, also har­
ness and buckboard. Paul Mil­ Farm Bureaus Recognized as Most
ler.
40-tfc
Effective Aid in Bettering Help,
Sales and Methods
FOR SALE—80 acres on the project.
Five acres in alfalfa. $2000 cash.
Running water on both forties the
O. A. C.—Representative farmers
year round. Inquire of E. P. Dodd think the farm help problem the
or Wm. Lacy, Umatilla.
40-43-p
biggest farm problem, with farm
For Sale—Big type Du roc-Jersey practices and markets as second and
hogs. Geo. H. Root.
49tfc third. Of 2300 northern and west­
ern farmers selected at random by an
For Sale—Big Type Duroc Jersey agent of the states relation service
boar, farrowed June 1. 1919; can be 682 think labor the hardest prob­
registered. Inquire of F. N. Whit­ lem, 637 consider improved farm
ney, or phone 181.
17-tfc practices most important, and 309
regard farm marketing the most
FOR SALE—1918 model Viele, good pressing problem.
as new. B. J. Nation.
tfc
"Two out of every three of these
FOR SALE—4 room house with'batir farmers were acquainted with the
room. Can be moved away front county agent and farm bureau work”
place if desired. Cheap. See Pete says the June number of the Oregon
Norquist in Columbia district, one
mile from Columbia school. 36tfc Farm Bureau News, "and 90 per
cent of them were favorable to It.
•Tn states having farm bureaus 66
For Sale or Trade—Wheat land .
or stock ranches for sale or * ‘per cent of the farmers placed the
trade in Oregon, Washington I bureau and agent first in greatest
service to them, and 13 per cent
and Montana, will take irrigat­
named the agricultural press first.
ed land as part payment and
Jerms to suit on balance. We
In states having no farm bureaus 26
will sell you a wheat ranch on
per cent named the county first, and
small payment down and bal­
39 per cent placed the agricultural
ance on easy payments.
•
press first.”
Oregon-Washington Ranches Co.
Bowman hotel bldg.. Pendleton.
Oregon. Box
513, Phone 542.
A Classified ad will sell it.
Extensive Litigation In Prospect Be-
cause of Winter Sport In Dutchess
County, New York.
Every sportsman In Dutchess coun­
ty is Interested In a lawsuit over the
skin of a fox which already has in­
volved two hunters, two farmers, four
lawyers and one justice of the peace,
bidding fair to take a trail leading
straight Into the Supreme court, a dis­
patch from Poughkeepsie to the New
York Evening Sun says.
Reynard was shot and wounded
while In woods belonging to De Witt
Clinton Flanagan, formerly member of
congress.- The woupded fox reached
the farm of L. C. Hart, where it was
discovered by Edward Meade, an em­
ployee of Mr. Hart. Meade used a
club and dispatched the animal, tak­
ing possession of the skin. The two
sportsmen demanded possession of the
trophy, but this was refused.
One lawyer representing the sports
men found an ancient law which pro­
vided that a wild animal shot by hunt­
ers belongs to them whether It Is re­
covered immediately or escapes to oth­
er parts.
•
In a justice’s court Meade was ar-
raigned on a charge of having hunted
without a license, his weapon having
been a club, but he was promptly
acquitted.
But the question of the pelt remain­
ed unsettled until the justice found
a colonial statute which states that
whenever a close (inclosed holding of
land) is Invaded by a predatory ani­
mal said animal may lawfully be
seized or killed. Under this ruling the
fox skin was awarded to Meade.
JOHNSTON (Massey-Harris) MOWER
Backed by Our Written Guarantee
The mower sold with an absolute guarantee for satisfactory service
and allowed out on trial where the purchaser might be in doubt. A
mnwer with more than 20 years of satisfactory service to its record
and one made especially for alfalfa.
SAPPERS’ INC-
Phone 671
HARDWARE
Phone 671
IMPLEMENTS
STILL CLING TO RAG DOLL
Simplest of A l Playthings Remains TAP SUGAR SACK SOFTLY
Enthroned In the Heart of Small
BY USING SUBSTITUTES
•
American Girl.
The old rag doll still retains its su­
preme seat In the realm of child fancy,
despite the Invasion of airplanes that
fly. bisque dolls that walk, talk and
roll their eyes, wireless sets that wire
and automobiles that auto, according
to Homer Stephens, president of, the
American Toy Exhibitors, Inc., the
New York Evening Telegram states.
“Although we have every form of
toy imaginable which can and does
please the heart of the child, there is
nothing like the old rag doll,” Mr.
Stephens said. “There were more rag
dolls manufactured and sold last year
than ever before, and I understand
the demand has Increased this year.
“All toy manufacturers have inven­
tors who turn out new articles every
year. This year's innovation Is the
popular-priced toy phonograph, which
plays arty record and costs but a few
dollars. Toys this year have been
made especially to promote what
might be called 'juvenile engineering.'
“They are built for the purpose of
Instilling the constructive spirit in the
child, and we have found a market
for those things even among the
grownups.
“But the American child still de­
mands Its rag doll.”
_
__ —
•
As It Used to Be.
A young member of the Uniform
Rank, K. of P. lodge was making ar­
rangements to go to the annual party
which his chapter gave. The affair
was called the ‘‘annual-annual,” and
he talked a great deal about it at
home.
One evening his mother became in
terested In the party. “I don't be-
liete your lodge has enough affairs,”
she told him. “Now. several years ago
when your father attended lodge reg­
ularly there used to be something al-
most every ’ night. “Let’s see,” she
mused, “what kind of night they called
them.”
The younger man winked at his
chum.
"Probably nightcaps then,
mother." he retorted. “You remember
that was before we went dry In In­
diana."—Indianapolis News.
Echo Flour Mills
Honey, Syrup, and Dried Fruits May
Replace Some Sugar In Cook­
ing and Serving
O. A. C.—“Conserve sugar by us­
ing honey, syrup, and dried fruits—
prunes, raisins, figs, dates, pears,
and peaches,” say food specialists at
the Oregon Agricultural College.
Products cooked with strained
honey are said to have a pleasing
characteristic honey flavor.
One cup of honey may replace one
cup of sugar, but the milk or other
liquid should be reduced one-fifth
cup for each cup of honey.
Spices give their most agreeable
flavor when used with honey in all
flour mixtures.
•
Cooking fruits with the cereals
will sweeten the cereal and save
sugar. Raisins with cream of wheat,
figs with wheatina, or farina, are
examples of good combinations.
Corn syrup may be -used In stew­
ing or baking fruit, using one-half
cup of syrup to each pound of fruit.
Dried fruits are stewed 10 minutes
after soaking over night in water.
A few raisins in the rhubarb sauce
add flavor as well as help out the
sweetening.
* Cereals may be served sweetened
with syrup or with sweet fruits.
Echo, Oregon
—:------- MANUFACTURERS OF----------------
High Grade Patent
Blue Stem Flour
The Superior Product of Scientific Milling
Makes Better Bread \
•
Try a Sack
DEALERS IN GRAIN AND FEED
French Restaurant
4
UNDIR NSW MANAGEMENT
Most up to date restaurant in Eastern Oregon
»
Try our 36 cent dinner
AMERICAN LEGION OF PENDL­
ETON TO HOLD BIG SMOKER
Another ot those 34 round boxing
smokers such as delighted fight fans
of the county last April is to be
Pendleton’s only event of the Fourth
of July season. The American Leg-
ion post is presenting the boxing
card, consisting of four top-notch
bouts. In Happy Canyon, Pendleton.
Saturday evening, July 3.
Four of the eight boys on this
card worked for the Legion In Its
first big public smoker and each
made a big hit.
Each will take
part in a different bout with a fight­
Some Excitement In Oil Wells.
Competitive drilling plays a great ing opponent that is guaranteed to
part among wells In a single vicinity put up a real go all the way.
because all oil leases leak at the edges,
and whether you get your neighbor’s
oil or he gets yours is largely a mat­
ter of speed. Consequently a well in
the middle of a large tract is usually
let alone by the owner, or, at least, he
undertakes further drilling with de­
liberation. but If he strikes oil near
his boundary he drills his borders with
all haste, knowing that his neighbor
will “offset" his wells, on the other
side of the boundary just as fast as
he can get the equipment on the
ground.— Ray Morris In the World’s
Work.
I
HOHBACH’S
Bakery, Confectionery. Restaurant
--====
-== —=—
Do You T ake
Your Watch to a
Blacksmith for
Repairs
NO-Why Not?
Pendleton
--------------- :
BARBER SHOP
Clean and Sanitary
Then why take your ;
auto to a farmer ft r re- |
pairs when
Morrison & Son
Hot and Cold
Garage
SHOWER BATHS
Guarantee Work
WM. SHAAR
Quick Service
CLOSING OUT
Our Stock of Bicycles at Cost
Need Birds the Year ‘Round.
The little packet of eggs that would
have given rise to thousands of eater-
pillars form lunches for the winter
birds. In the orchards irregular bolea
through the loose flakes of bark at­
test to their usefulness again for they
tell of their inroads upon the hiber­
nating codling moths. Summer Is not
the only time for birds, says the Amer-
‘can Forestry Magazine. If we bad
more of them during the winter we
would not need so many In the sum­
mer.
Forests In New England.
The forest area of southern New
England I" now about 46 per cent of
the total land surface. This is equiv-
aient to 1,750,000 acres of forest land,
says the American Forestry associa­
tion of Washington. The area forest-
ed Is apparently on the increase. In
1910 the forested area was estimated
at 41 per cent, in 1850 as 32 per cent
and 10 i be Connecticut portion of the
territory In 1820 as about 26 per cent.
Also stock of
Columbia Dry Cell Batteries
at 45c each *
Those loose wheels on your auto need a little application of "Spoktite"-
$1.00 per can.
.
If you Mr. Autoist are going to take a trip soon in that Ford you better
buy one of those “Jake” gas pumps; $3.50.
HERMISTON AUTO CO
4
.