TB e IERMisTON LODGE DIRECTORY | ESTHER chapter No. ml o . ■- s, Q ueen meets second Tuesday evening of each month Another Royal Suggestion at 8:00 sharp in Masonic hall. Visiting members welcome. Emma S. Johnson, W- — Kathryn L. Garner. Sec. So tender they fairly melt in B ISCUIT! the mouth, and of such 0.O. F, V meets each Monday evening in Odd Fellows hall. Visiting members cordially invited. W R. Longhorn. Sec. G. H. Myers. N. G. glorious flavor that the appetite is never satis­ fied. These biscuits anyone can make with Royal Baking Powder and these unusual re­ cipes. Biscuits PROFESSIONAL CARDS J. A. PEED 2 cups flour 4 teaspoo.s Royal Baking Powder % teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons shortening % cup milk or half milk and half water Sift together flour, baking powder and salt, add shortening and rub In very lightly: add liquid slowly: roll or pat on floured board to about one Inch In thickness (handle as little as possible); cut with biscuit cutter. Bake in hot oven IS to 20 min­ utes. VETERINARY SURGEON Hermiston. Ore. DR. R. G. GALE Physician and Surgeon Office— Gladys Ave. near First St. Office Hours: Phone 641 10 t 12; 2 to 4; 7 to 8. DR. FRANCIS P. ADAMS OFFICE PHONE. 92 RESIDENCE PHONE. 595 Office Hours: » to 12 a. m.; 2 to 5:80 p. m. Day or night calls answered promptly DR. W. W. ILLSLEY Office over First National Bank Medicine Surgery Calls answered at all hours Residence phone 711 Office phone 551 DENTTSTP Hermiston, Oregon Office. Bark Bldg. Office Hours Office Phone, 93 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. Residence Phone Absolutely Pure While chopping wood last week, William Skinner seriously cut his foot and has not been able to come to school. Made from Cream of Tartar, derived from grapes. FREE Write TODAY for the New Royal Cook Book ; con­ tains 400 other recipes just as delightful ns these. Address F OYAL BAKING POWDERCO. 115 Fulton Street, New York City Dr. Dale Rothwell Optometrist and Optician Glasses ground to fit your eyes Fifteen years experience at your service American Nat. Bank Bldg. Pendleton, Oregon ------------------------ —1 Get Your FRESH BREAD EVERY MORNING From Your Local Dealer PENDLETON BAKING CO. BARBERING By Skilled Journeymen Barbers SHOWER BATHS WM. SHAAR T. L.HALL TRANSFER LONG AND SHORT HAULS PHONE 192 Leave orders at ELLIOTTS TIR I SHOP HERMISTON AUTO TRUCK TRANSFER PHONE 152 Hollis Percey, Prop. Hermiston, Ora. The French Restaurant AIR-TIGHT WALL IS NEEDED In Building • Silo Protection Must B« Provided for Silage to Prevent Molding. STRICTLY FIRST CLASS Hohbach Bros., Proprietors Pend’eton, Oregon PAINTING Kalsomining, Frescoing, Interior Decorating Paper Hanging HAVE YOUR HOME FIXED UP FOR THE HOLIDAYS E. H.MACKLEY Leave word at Mack’s Store NOTICE OF SCHOOL MEETING Notice is hereby given to the legal voters of School District No. 14 of Umatilla County, State of Oregon, that a School Meeting of said district will be held at the School House on the 10th day of December, 1920, at 3:30 o’clock in the afternoon, to vote on the prop­ osition of levying a special district tax. The total amount of money need­ ed by the district during the ensuing year is estimated in the following budget and includes the amounts to be received from the county school fund, state school fund, special dis­ trict tax, and all other moneys of the district. It makes little difference what ma­ terial is used in building a silo as long as the silo is practically air tight all around the walls and bottom. Wood, cement, tile, Iron, and plaster silos have been used with success. Protec­ tion against mold Is largely dependent upon the exclusion of air, and for this purpose an alr-tlght wall Is required and the ensiled material should be properly packed In the silo. Silage will keep equally well in any one of the BUDGET silos mentioned provided the walls are properly made, are air and moisture ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES tight, and the material is correctly en­ Teachers’ salaries............... $19,135.00 siled. Furniture .......................... 300.00 Apparatus and supplies, such as maps, chalk, e- REINFORCING INSIDE OF SILO rasers, stoves, curtains, etc................................... 400.00 Where High Winds Prevail It Ie Good Library books ..................... 100.00 * Insurance to Place Wood Hoops Flags ..............................----- 25.00 at Top and Bottom. Repairs of school houses, outbuildings or fences .. 1,000.00 Where high winds prevail It Is good Improving grounds ............ 500.00 insurance to reinforce the Inside of a Transportation of pupils 2,070.00 stave silo with wood hoops at the top Tuition of Pupils ............ and bottom. Pieces of thin, narrow Janitor’s wages ................. 1,140.00 lumber, usually weather boarding, are Janitor's supplies .............. 200.00 nailed to the staves so as to form a Fuel ...................................... 600.00 350.00 hoop of 4 to 5 thicknesses of the Light and power ................. 100.00 weather-boarding, care being exercised Water ..... 145.00 to break Joints. The strips are 8x10 Clerk’s salary and bond .... 50.00 feet long and they may be soaked in Postage and Stationary .... For the payment of bonded water so as to bend easier. debt and interest there­ on, Issued under Sec­ tions 117, 144 to 148, CAPACITY OF COW’S STOMACH and 422 of the School Laws of Oregon, 1917 .. 2,580.00 Not Enough Nutrition In Pasture Interest on Warrants........ 800.00 Grass to Make Maximum Pro­ Printing and Notices ........ 50.00 duction of Milk. Insurance ............................. 120.00 The bulky nature of pasture grass Total estimated amount places a positive limit upon the capaci­ of money to be expend­ ty of the cow to take feed. In other ed for all purposes words, the cow's stomach cannot con during the year .... $29,665.00 tain grass enough to supply the re­ quired nutrients for maximum milk ESTIMATED RECEIPTS production ; therefore a part of the ra­ tion should be of a more concentrated From county school fund during the coming school nature. Good pasture contains an year .............................. 7,700.00 abundant supply of succulent palatable From state school fund and nutritious grasses. during the coming school year ........................... 650.00 Estimated amount to be re­ ceived from all other sources during the com­ ing school year tuition .. 1,760.00 m. HOTEL 4— Total estimated receipts, CORNELIUS not including the money to be received from the tax which it is pro- posed to vote............... 10,110.00 RECAPITULATION BAKERY Md CONFECTIONERY Elegantly Furnished Rooms la Connection The cast for the play has been def­ initely chosen and are hard at work. Watch for the date. The girls and boys of the High School are hard at work at basket ball practice and will soon be ready for some real games. 2% cups flour 1 teaspoon salt 4 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder 2 tablespoons shortening 1 egg 72 cup water ha cup sugar 2 teaspoons cinnamon 4 tablespoons seeded raisins. Sift 2 tablespoons of meas­ ured sugar with flour, salt and baking powder; rub shortening In lightly; add beaten egg to water and add slowly. Roil out 3-inch thick on floured board; brush with melted butter, sprinkle with su­ gar, cinnamon and rai- sins. Roll as for jelly roll; cut into 112-inch pieces, place with cut edges up on well-greased pan; sprinkle with a little su- rar and cinnamon. Bake n moderate oven 30 to 35 minutes; remove from pan at once. Eye. treated, tested and Glasses Fitted Office over First National Bank At a recent meeting of the Senior class, Harold Waterman was elected as the new editor of the High School Mirror, and Martha Winslow as as- sistant. The class believes in pas­ sing the honors around. With the next issue of the Mirror the new ed­ itors will assume their duties. BAKING POWDER Royal Cinnamon Buns Physician and Surgeon Osteopathy ROYAL Devoted to the Interest and Development of the Hermiston Schools HIGH SCHOOL NOTES A. W. Prann, W. M. V ineyard lodge no . 206, 1. House Phone 21 I From the N ew R oyal C ook B ook Tuesday evenings of each month. Visiting breth- Kellogg, Secy. The High School Mirro Biscuits and Cinnamon Buns IJERMISTON LODGE NO. 138, A. F. & A.M; n meets in Masonic Hallen First and Third C. W ERALD, HERMISTON, ÖREGON: Two of the most homelike hotels In Portland, located in the heart of the shopping and theatre district. All Oregon Electric trains stop at the Seward Hotel, the House of Cheer. Excellent dining room in connection. The Hotel Cornelius, the House of Welcome, is only two short blocks from the Seward. Our brown busses meet all trains. Rates $1.50 and up. W. C. CULBERTSON. Prop. jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim L. VAUGHANS EELECTRIC FIXTURES s s J. = AND APPLIANCES s = Phone 139 = E 203 >■ Court st. Pendieten, Ore. = ’HiiiiiniiiiiiniiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiitM Advertise in the Herald. It pays. The final foot ball game of the season on Thanksgiving Day result­ ed in the overwhelming victory of 56 to 0 for the High School over Stanfield. In the first quarter of the first half, touchdowns were made by Waterman and Warriner. Goals kicked both times by Herbert Hall. In the second quarter, touchdown made by Warriner. Hall kicked the goal. In the third quarter of the second half, two touchdowns were made by Haddox, and one by Hall. Goals were kicked by Hall. In the fourth quarter touchdowns were made by Haddox and Boynton. Hall kicked the goals. Last Saturday night about seven couples, chaperoned by Miss Norton, made up a movie party, after which they went to the butte and roasted weinies and marshmallows. Clever jokes were told and songs were sung while the young folks sat around the fire. Margaret Neary was absent from school Monday. BROWN AND GOLD LEAVES Umatilla High School By Lotys Davis Teachers and pupils returned to school this week with renewed en­ thusiasm after last week’s Thanks­ giving vacation. The teachers great­ ly enjoyed the relaxation from work; several visited with friends. Miss Irving to Portland, Miss Jenks vis­ ited at Walla Walla, and Miss Larsen with her sister at Milton. The time for the regular six Howard Parrish and Leta Thoma have been absent this week. school after a long with a broken leg. siege at Friday afternoon, the Hermi. eighth grade defeated the Stan? If Genevieve wasn't always smiling eighth grade 14 to 7. Ear car If Marion Stevens wasn’t giggling made one touchdown and the all the time. was made by a center rush. J If somebody didn't get bawled out. Watson kicked both goals. 1 ° If Herbert Hall would be quiet. quick and snappy game. If Ruby Scott didn’t have a pair (Payne) The second six-week's test J If Clarice would come to school or passed and the eighth grade pus time. are very glad. The first three If the girls Lad ears. rank are as follows: Gwendo) LaBarre, Ruth Woughter and Hei GRADE NOTES Pelmulder. It was this weather that put the mist in Hermiston. The eighth grade teacher obsery that the pupils whose parents , The first grade pupils are arrang that their children do a little sein ing for a little program for Christ­ work at home each night rank t mas. They are busy decorating the highest. room for the occasion. Some of the pupils of the sin Van Wilson of the third grade is seventh and eighth grades have be the proud owner of a new pony. organized into a cooking club a are waiting for the literature to con Leitha and Velma Hartle are ab­ so they can begin work. Mrs. Llo sent from school with the mumps. was chosen as the club leader. Wouldn't it be Queer: Louis Sharpenburg is also absent on account of sickness. We have just received a shipmet of books for the High School libra from County Superintendent Gree Fourteen visitors attended the A few of them are as follows: Thanksgiving program of the fourth Youth and Opportunity ....... Sapp grade last week. Physics of the Household...... Lyn Pearl and Mary McCullough are Why go to College . ............. Coop leaving to attend the Walla Walla Geography of Commerce....... Srot) Vocational Guidance ........ Puff school. You are the Hope of the World Georgianna Briggs was absent -....................................... Hagedon Astronomy in a Nut Shell..... Servi from school Tuesday. Text book of Cooking .............. The Seventh grade enjoyed the The World’s Greatest Short I Stories ............................. Co sixth grade Thanksgiving program Healthy Living .. ........ .. last Wednesday very much. Form and Functions of American Government ................... Re Who ever took the grade foot ball out of the hall please return it be­ An Adequate Diet .................. Stil cause we are losing a lot of valuable The High School Debate Book .................................... «Bobbi time while waiting for it. The Gas Engine ....................... Poo Dorothy Shotwell has returned to Winning Declamations ........ Shurt weeks’ tests has rolled around again. This season of bliss will be followed by the distribution of those fateful bits of pasteboard which informs us that we know less than we thought we did. At a special school election last Saturday the proposition for the building of an addition to the school house was carried by a large major- ity. This will enable an enlarge­ ment to be made in the course of study in the near future. Miss Frances Benjamin, sister of Prof. Benjamin, visited school Tue day. Miss Benjamin is from tl Good Samaritan Hospital of Por land. • Another new sixth grade pupil • w ill ¡am Smitts from Hermiston. • The Catholic Ladies will hold Bazaar and food sale at the Ja White Tailor shop, Saturday, Dece ber 11th. Home made mince me will be on sale. Hot waffles and et fee will be served afternoon ai evening. 12 To Celebrate the 400th Anniversary of Luther s. tLhe, •I +1 ‘gelee h” —ove % r dia £AS Wittenberg, Prussia. Is to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Martin Luther in December next. The illustre" gives a view of the town, which was the reformer's home, and of the door of the Stadtkirche to which be his famous thesis. Sinn Fein Demonstration in Heart of London Total estimated expenses for the year ............... 29,665.00 Total eatimated receipts, not including the tax to be voted ........... . 10,110.00 Balance, amount to be raised by the district tax ................................ 19,555.00 The amount of money to be raised by this special tax is more than the amount raised by special school dis trict tax in the year immediately preceding this, plus six per cent. It is necessary to raise this additional amount by special levy for the follow­ ing reasons: All salaries have been advanced. There will be two or three more teachers required. All supplies have increased in price, and more supplies are needed and more improvements on building are needed. Dated this 8th day of November, 1920. F. B. Swayze view of the enormous crowd at Sinn Fein . . . -, rion Chairman of Board of Directors •tors General addressed the multitude. demons tration in Trafalgar square, London Attest R. A. Brownson, District Clerk. 10-4tc Many