THE
HERM ISTON
HERALD,
HERMISTON
THE
Published every Friday at Hermiston,
Echo Flour Mills
OREGON.
HERALD
Umatilla County, Oregon, in the heart of Eastern
Oregon’s great irrigated alfaifa fields, by the Herald Publishing Company.
M. C. Athey, Editor
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Entered as second-class mailer
Echo, Oregon
HERMISTON,
December >. 1906, al the postoffice al Hermiston, Oregon
Subscription Rates: One Year, $2.00; Six Months, $1.00
-------------- MANUFACTURERS OF---------------
Nothing is difficult; it is only we who are indolent.—Hayden
High Grade Patent
Blue Stem Flour
The Superior Product of Scientific Milling
Makes Better Bread
Try a Sack
DEALERS IN GRAIN AND FEED
ASK YOUR
DEALER
- FOR-
Round-Up Brand
OVERALLS
=================================
THEY ARE FULL CUT
And another pair free if they rip
SYLVAN G. COHN CO. Inc.,
Wholesale Mene Furnishing Goods
Pendleton, Oregon
WE ARE SHOWING FALL AND WINTER SAMPLES FOR SUITS
Ed. V. Price Line
Hregak •
Which it one of the very best and prices are reasonable for this class
of tailoring
Gordon Hats
To Arrive.
The Newest Shades and Styles $5.00 to $7.50
Gordon Caps
In the New Snappy Styles and Cloths $1.75 to $3.50
Wc are Headquarters for
Carhaarts’ Overalls
UNION MADE
$3.50
Cooper’s Underwear
Union Suits $2.50 to $7.50, Fall and Winter Weight
New Outings
VOTES COUNT NOW
For many years we men have been
told what would happen if women
were ever given equal suffrage with
men.
Now they have it.
In future the vote of the hum-
blest female citizen will count just
as much as that of the president of
the United States.
Acts, not words, will write the
story of the future.
It is a matter of speculation as to
just what effect the feminine vote
will have in national and state pol
itics, but the presumption is that it
will have a tendency to purify the
ballot and retire a certain stamp of
politicians who have been seeking to
debauch the ballot for years.
Morally women is unquestionably
the superior of man, and if she dem
onstrates the fact that she is broad
minded enough to rise above peanut
politics and vote for men of stability
and character, regardless of political
considerations, we may reasonably
expect her advent to be one of su
preme importance to the future wel
fare of our country. In such an
event political leaders will hesitate
long before attempting to foist up
on the voters of their party a man
who does not truly represent the in
telligence and the integrity of that
party.
Until women adjust themselves to
their new station in life some no
doubt will vote merely as their hus
bands do, while others will do their
own thinking and vote as they please
It is to the latter class that me
must look for any material change
from our present political methods
and system.
The November election will tell
much of the story, but few political
forecasters are willing to make even
the smallest kind of a prediction at
this time.
The politicane themselves are all
floundering in a sea of uncertainty.
JAB ’EM, UNCLE, JAB ’EM!
Ie 1 »reported from Washington
that Uncle Sam has annexed a sharp
stick and is beginning to jab the
profiteers, with the result that a
decline in the price of living is an
nounced.
Just where the decline is we don’t
know, but we hope it is somewhere.
One thing, though, is certain,
Uncle's stick will have to be mighty
sharp and mighty long before it will
make even a dent in the alligator
hides of the gougers.
Gouging is a pleasant and lucra
tive pastime—to the gougers—and
they can hardly be expected to re-
form their ways until they feel the
point of the stick or the weight of
the star spangled foot.
But Washington says there is a de
cline, and because Washington says
so It must be so.
But personally we decline to fall
for a decline that declines to decline. ;
97%0
35c to 60c
• THE
/
_
_
Just the tiring for Fall Drapery, 50 cents to 75 cents
Diansets
.,
Are now coming in and they arc fine. $3.50 to $15.00
Hermist 11 Produce
& Supply Co.
To me, after revisiting the East
an absence of ten years. It
seems as if all its splendid past and
all Its present discontent were record-
ed and symbolized in the imperial pal-
aces of Peking, Seoul anti Tokyo. Ten
j ears ago all three were the habita-
lions of emperors, sacred spots from
whose mysterious depths issued the
edicts whereat men trembled asd
obeyed. Today the Son of Heaven
and the Lord of the Morning Calm
have gone their ways, to Join the
mournful company of kings In exile.
Only his majesty of Tokyo remains, 9
«im, mysterious figure In the medieval
seclusion of Chiyoda, a picturesque
survival of old Japan, like an idol In
a shrine, a sort of living Buddha in
the great new city throbbing with ma-
chinery. -J. O. P. Bland in Asin.
Street safe and buried at sea, Cummings
to Just the person to officiate, but his
selection to a serious handicap if the
Full Line of Ladies' Shoes
Real dressy ones and made for comfort ; all sizes
vention Chairman a ’Tragedy'
for the Party.
COX CANDIDACY A DISGRACE
His Nomination Would Be an Incult
the
Liquor
Forces,
dry States, Onto and Kentucky, have in-
structed for Governor Cox makes It
roper to consider his position oa the
iquor question. It to becoming every
day more and more apparent that he to
the man about whose standard the wet
forces win gather.
“ Governor Edwards to a joke. A
drunkard In the last stages of delirium
tremens would hsve sense enough to
know that Edwards has no chancs of
nomination. Senator Hitchcock did. not
have any chanca even before the Ne-
brasku primary, hence he had nothing
is lost. Governor Cox to their man and
ho has fairly won the dishonor that he
to a position In which he could disgrace
a nation.
For years the men engaged
In the liquor business have been the real
anarchists of the country, far more dan-
gerous than the professional ana re n .ta.
Governor Cox has become their candi-
dato.
LINCOLN, Neb, May 1*—Willtom
His nomination
would make the
Jennings Bryan turned his political bat- Democratic Party the leader or the law.
ices
element
of
the
country and hie
torios ton’ght on liomer 8. Cummings,
election, if. auch a thing wore possible,
Chairman of the Democratic National weald
tura the
White House over to
Committee, and Governor Cox of Ohio.
those who defy the Government and hold
mings
Full Line of Girls’ and Boys’
and Small Children’s Shoes.
to
Democratic
sound
the
National
keynote
Conve
the
to
It to a melancholy beginning If the
Democrats have any intention of mak-
M » campaign this year
If the Demo-
ratic Party to to be wrapped In a
we| ' shroud, locked up In a Wall
nation and no chance of his election It
nominated, but why should any Demo-t
crat be willing to support a man whose,
nomination would insult the conscience’
of the nation? For the triumph of proev
hibition to a triumph of the nation’s
conscience.
I
The Oak Tan Shoe Store
Hermiston, Oregon
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B utter
WRAPPERS FOR
S ale
at
T he herald O ffice
Phone 331
“ The Yard of Best Quality”
H. M. STRAW. MGR.
SEE
I
1.1. Hisrel
HITT
CONFECTIONERY
STATIONERY
-FOR-
Sua
GUNS
Snutain
—and—
All Popular Soft Drink»
And
ICE CREAM
AMMUNITION
In Conet and Packages
A FULL LINE
News stand
Cigats and Tobacco
CEMENT PIPE
For Irrigating and Draining
For Foundations and Building
Cement Brick
For Chimneys
MANUFACTURED BY
Hermiston Cement Products Co.
HERMISTON, OREGON
JUST ARRIVED
A nice line of high grade wind proof work vests.
Columbia drab moleskin, suede leather lined,
glove leather sleeve, knit cuffs and collars, each $14.
Same as above, mackinaw lined, mole skin
sleeves, each $9.00.
Western Quilt Batts, weight 3 pounds, $2.00.
DON’T FORGET THAT NICE LINE OF
The Oak Tan Shoe Store repairing is sufficiently
well known and proven to need no comment.
Send your orders by mail or express and we will
prepay them back to you on short notice.
Sam Rodgers, Proprietor
Inland Empire Lumber Company •
party proposes to appeal to the progrès-
_ __
_
Nebraskan Asserts.
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. ■
Concrete Blocks
YORK - TIMES.
"Diamond
ADI ERTISINC PAYS-DO YOU>
I
t
eiter
NEW
Calls Choice of Democratic Con-
by
IIIIUUINIUUlUillUUIIIÍilUllilllllllllli
Fading Shrinea of Oriental Splendor,
,
•
Stenographer Extraordinary.
Two members of the bar were trying
a replevin suit in the superior court
recently and in the course of the trial
got into a sharp wrangle—as lawyers
sometimes do—over the admission of a
certain piece of evidence. The wrangle
resolved itself Into an oral battle in
which both lawyers tried to talk at
once.
They spoke in loud tones and at a
rapid-fire gait. When the smoke had
cleared away and the case was over
they were quite surprised to learn that
the court stenographer had been able
to get down In his book every word
they had said, despite the fact they
were both talking at the same time.
The clerk of courts commented on the
feat.
"Oh,” remarked one of the lawyers,
“that little chap could take down a
hailstorm and never miss a stone!”—
Portland Express.
BRYAN ASSAILS COX
AND B. S. CUMMINGS Emmtetdal •
Dresden Cretonne
T
_--------------------------------------------
Are arriving and this is the season for this class of Merchandise.
These are priced on earlier purchases, lower than we can buy them
now
NEW PATTERNS OF
AS THE EDITOR SEES IT
| A good citizen stopped us on the
street a few days ago. He had a
, .
case of nerves. He was peeved be-
cause "nothing ever happens In this
town." He will recover,
But his remark started a train of
thoughts In the editorial mind, and
we are passing them on to you, as
is the custom of our profession.
It is true that "nothing ever hap
pens in this town,” and that Is one
of its beauties, its greatest asset.
We have no murders, no riots, no
race disturbances, no class conflicts,
no rowdyism, no disgusting scandals
—none of the numerous things that
happen so often In many other places.
We have a class of citizens who
are law abiding, God fearing, patri
otic, and who respect the rights of
other people.
Our citizens are energetic, thrifty,
and are producers—not destroyers.
They are workers in the hive of in
dustry—not drones.
Truth abounds, because It is a
community of clean and upright
people who have nothing to hide
from the rest of the world.
It should be a matter of pride to
every citizen that "nothing ever hap
pens in this town."
HE unusual regard in which .
the average family holds
its home is, of course, the re
flection of unusual qualities in
the home itself.
One owner might tell you
* his home is comfortable. An
other that it is beautiful. A
third that it is convenient.
But if they all Were to sum
up the reasons why they value
their home so highly they would
probably say that the home
gives a feeling of pride, self-
confidence and safety,
W” Canned Good* and Coffee*
EVERY CAN OR PACKAGE GUARANTEED
BROWNELL’S STORE