Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1921)
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTÒN, OREGON. Fruit Growers' Handbook Popular Demand for the Fruit Growers’ Handbook has been so strong that it will soon have to be reprinted, re ports A. L. Lovett, entomologist of the O. A. C. Experiment station. The book was originally planned as a guide for Oregon growers, but out side specialists have found that it is » a handy and reliable reference text. Requests for ample copies have come from Washington State horti culturist and E. D. Hunter, former student of horticulture at O. A. C.. and now horticulturist for Skagit county, Washington, and the pomol- ogist at Iowa State eollege. So use ful has the volume proved to Oregon orchardists that the department in ... - Dr. Freeze makes Used Furniture, stoves, heaters and tends to put out like hand books on regular visits to Her- ranges bought, sold, exchanged or stone fruit, insects, small fruit, if at miston. Consult him repaired. Correll’s shop. 7-tfc a later date the present volume is free and be assured of found to fill the bill. Elliott's Tire Shop. good eye service. 38 Sefety Deposit Boxes Travelers Checks Insurance of all Kinds ----- V—7--------------------------- pm tesse “ilkrk) WANT ADS, If you don’t find what you want in the classified columns .advertise for it. You’ll get It. WANTED NOTICE: All classified ads are sup posed to be paid in advance. Here after, this rule will be strictly en forced. - Herald Pub. Co. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Webber 3 % in wagon, good as new; springtooth harrow, also black team weighing 1400 each. H. Bottger, Hermiston. 18-3tp FOR SALE—15 h. p. Alamo engine; Ford delivery body. See Harry Kelley. 51-tfc FOR SALE—Duroc Jersey swine. Spring and fall pigs sired by the grand champion. C. C. Mason. 5-trc FOR SALE—Royal Typewriter, No. 10 in first class condition $50.00 10-tfc FOR SALE or Exchange—$5,000.00 equity in two houses in Portland for good irrigated land near Her miston. Geo. W. Elder Agency, Hermiston, Oregon. 11-tfc FOR SALE—20 acres, Stanfield pro ject, 10 acres alfalfa, all fenced rabbit wire, buildings and well. Stock and furniture also for sale. Inquire this office. 42-tfc FOR SALE—Good W. Agnew. farm team. A. 47-tfc FOR SALE or Exchange—480 acres good wheat land, will take 10 to 20 acres good Hermiston property in part paymenet, balance the very best of terms. Geo. W. Elder Agency, Hermiston, Oregon. 11-tfc FOR SALE—Very reasonable, five room bungalow nicely finished in side (something different and new) Inquire at Herald office. 17-2tp FOR SALE—30 • ft windmill steel tower, one 18x9 hayrack. W. W. Rogers. • 17-2tp FOR SALE—NW % of the SW1 of Sec. 5, Tp. 4. This 40 is in the ir rigated district of the Western Land & Irrigation Co’s, project— unimproved, and will be sold worth the money. It was bought as an investment. It is difficult to manage at long range. Some one will get a snap. Send at once your best offer. G. F. Jordan, Carlinville, Ill. 17-4tc FOR SALE—My 20 acre ranch, two miles from Hermiston, joins Mc- Keen and Parker’s place. Half leveled, about 2 acres in alfalfa. House, other improvements If sold at once, only $1400. Terms W. L. Kimble, Pomeroy, Wash., R. D. 1. Phone 26F12. 14-tfc FOR SALE—50 second hand sewing machines in good condition, or will trade for hay, chickens, furniture, or anything else we can handle. C. E. Henley, Pendleton, or leave word with Mrs. W. B. Beasley, Hermiston. 14-tfc. FOR SALE—Winesap Apples, $2.00 and 11.00 box. H. E. Hanby. 8-3tc FOR SALE—Piano. C. Todd. THE feeling of security is well worth WAXED Carbon paper that will not soil the hands for sale at the Her the premium paid. How about ald office. that Fire Insurance? See the E. P. Dodd Agency. 11-tfc Inquire Fannie 9-tfc MISCELLANEOUS A complete stock of bath tubs, toilets, wash bowles, and hot water tanks and fixtures. If we Avent what you want, we’ll get it Repairing and installing. I. E. Putman. CASH Paid for second hand goods Correll’s Shop. 17-tfc General Auctioneering. G. A. Rise- ling, Stanfield, Oregon. Work guaranteed, phone. 3-tie T. L. Hani Transfer—City and country hauling. Leave ordere at Elliott’s Tire Shop. Phone 192. 30tfe Adding machine rolls of paper for sale at the Herald office. WHEN your subscription expires for Saturday Evening Poet .. $2 50 Ladies Home Journal .... : . 2.00 Country Gentleman ........... 1.00 send your renewals to me. I only get credit for the subscriptions 1 send in. If you send it in I get no credit. Leave part of the money home. Ed. H. Graham. 47-tfe BUTTER WRAPPERS Printed to Your Order THE HERALD OFFICE Notice of Final Hearing LODGE DIRECTORY Q ueen ESTHER chapter No. 101, o. e . s ., meets second Tuesday evening of each month at 8:00 sharp in Masonic hall. Visiting member welcome. Emma S. Johnson, W. M. Kathryn L. Garner. Sec. LI ERM ISTON LODGE NO. 138, A. F. & A. M 1 - meets in Masonic Hall on First and Third Tuesday evenings of each month. Visiting breth ren welcome. C. W. Kellogg, Secy. A. W. Prann. W. M. VINEYARD LODGE NO. 206, 1. O. O. F, " meets each Monday evening in Odd Fellows hall. Visiting members cordially invited. W. R. Longhorn, Sec. - G. H. Myers. N. G. Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned, as administrator of the estate of Fred A. Brunson, deceased, PROFESSIONAL CARDS has filed his Final Account and Re* pori in said estate with the Clerk of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Umatilla County; and VETERINARY SURGEON that the Judge thereof has fixed House Phone 21 Hermiston, Ore. Monday, the 7th day of February, 1921, at the hour of 10:00 o’clock a. m., as the time, and the County DR. R. G. GALE Court room in the Court House at Pendleton, Umatilla County, Oregon, Physician and Surgeon as the place for the hearing of ob Office—Gladys Ave. near First St, jections to such final account and Office Hours: the settlement thereof. 10 to 12; 2 to 4; 7 t 8. Phone 641 F. B. Swayze, Administrator of the estate of DR. FRANCIS P. ADAMS Fred A. Brunson, Deceased. Physician and Surgeon Raley. Raley & Steiwer, Eyes treated, tested and Glasses Fitted Pendleton, Oregon, At Office over First National Bank torneys for Administrator. 17-5tc OFFICE PHONE, 92 J. A. PEED RESIDENCE PHONE, 595 Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. m.; 2 to 5:30 p. m. Day or night calls answered promptly ELECTRIC FIXTURES AND APPLIANCES Phone 139 203 E. Court St. Pendleton, Oro DR. W. W. ILLSLEY Office over First National Bank Osteopathy Medicine Surgery Calls answered at all hours Office phone 551 Residence phone 711 D r . F. V. PRIME HOTEL SEWARD 21 NOUSE ,.8 __ Ausane (A HOTEL CORNELIUS efe. DENTTSTR * Hermiston, Oregon Office, Bank Bldg. Office Phone, 93 Office Hours Residence Phone 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. Dr. Dale Rothwell Optometrist and Optician Two of the most homelike hotels in Portland, located in the heart of Glasses ground to fit your eyes Fifteen years experience at your service the shopping and theatre district. All Oregon Electri« trains stop at American Nat Bank Bldg. Pendleton, Oregon 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. Real Estate, Loans, Insurance, Investments Land and City 'Property : Bought, Sold, Rented, Exchang ed and improved. Get Your FRESH BREAD EVERY MORNING From Your Local Dealer Loans-- Agency for Union Savings & Loan Association of Portland. Investment. Excellent rate of interest on money, protected by State deposit of securities. Loans on improved city proper ty. Can let you have money to build. Investments: BARBERING By Skilled Journeymen Barben SHOWER BATHS WM. SHAAR T. L. HALL It is refreshing In an almost lit eral sense, this report that a traveler brings back from the Algerian Sa hara about the sinking of wells and the consequent irrigation and the im provement of highways. It is delightful to imagine a fringe of green 'n that country, arid since (he beginning of time, the blossom ing of orchards and gardens, the wav ing of fields of grain, and the motor car relieving the patient camel of Its burden and making across the wastes in one-tenth the time the camel would take to do it. Between Tunis and Carthage this observer counted hun dreds of American windmills, and the nomad Moor Is ceasing to be so much of a nomad, but la rejoicing in an urgent bid for American motorcars. How far It Is possible for windmills and motorcars to work south from the border states of northern Africa and invade that hitherto hopeless sandy waste perhaps nobody knows, but It Is encouraging that the inva sion Is proceeding Just as it is con stantly narrowing the limits of the arid regions on our own continent. Good, hard highways are linking the artificial oases together and the mo torcar furnishes a quick way of com munication between them as well as a means Infinitely superior to the old camel caravan of getting fruits and grains to market.—Omaha World- Herald. LONG AND SHORT HAULS PHONE IK Leave orders at ELLIOT TS TIRE SHOP « HERMISTON AUTO TRUCK E. P. DODD Hollis Percey, Prop. TRANSFER PHONE 152 Hermiston, Ore. " THE PLAY HOUSE- THREE BIG PROGRAMS!! Saturday, Jan. 15 Douglas MacLean and Doris May —in— “23 1-2 HOURS LEAVE” Mr. and Mrs. Carter De Haven in “HOODOOED” 15 356 2:30. 7 and 9 P. M. Sunday, January 16 MABLE NORMAND in " Jinks” Mutt and Jeff in “Nothing But Girls” FOX NEWS 15-35c 2:30, 7 and 9 P. M. DYES TO BE SUPERFLUOUS? Short Cut to Gorgeous Colorings Being Worked Out by a Wizard, It is Said. A. W. Brabham of Olar, S. C., soon to be known as the Wizard of the Cotton Patch, Burbank's only rival, an nounces that the American dye indus try is unnecessary, or at least soon will be, according to Drug and Chemi cal Markets. For has he not grown cotton already dyed various shades of brown, green, blue, pink and gray as It comes on the plant? And does he not expect to produce black In a few years as well as all the colors of the rainbow ? Tnus will the need of colors for cotton be obviated and the wealth that now is being accumulated by the dye barons will be diverted In the cotton growing districts of the South. No mention is made of dyes for wool, but even these will be unneces sary when some genius undertakes to spend half a lifetime crossbreeding sheep to color their fleece, and this genius would have less difficulty than with cotton, as he would have ready at hand the world over supply of “black sheep.” Then it would only be necessary to teach the silk worms to turn out colored silk after feeding on the flower bed and the flax plant to produce green fibers from green sand, blue from blue marl, red from red clay, and black from loam, ad in- finltura. Wonderful prospects, IF— On Selecting Doors. Haphazard selection of floors of the ready-made variety should not be al lowed In the building of a fine home, declares an announcement issued at Chicago by the lumber interests.. Doors should he designed by the architect who builds the structure, that they may be In keeping with the general style of the house, it is stated. It is pointed out that in the selec tion of an attractive and distinctive doorway depends the visitor's first im pression of the home he Is about to enter. Recounting the history of doors, lumber manufacturers point out that In early days wooden doors were hung on sockets instead of hinges. In the middle ages doors were richly carved and In the gothic period were nearly covered with intricate ornamentation extending as part of the hinges. Why They Laughed. A little girl In one of the lower- grade rooms of the Columbus publie schools brought forth peals of laugh ter from the roomful of pupils, and when she sat down, blushing with sur prise and embarrassment, she did not know what had caused the un precedented hilarity. She had been reading and when she came to the word “lord,” used as a title, she did not comprehend it properly. The sen tence was, “My lord, permit me to pass.” The little girl, evidently hav ing heard the term used In another way. said with great emphasis and at the top of her voice: "My lord! Permit me to pass I”—Indianapolis News. TRANSFER If you want to buy, advise with us as to safe investment. We know values, soils, water rights and possibilities of success. Can direct you right. We hold state license to do business and are under bond for honest dealing. Whatever we re present we will stand by. 17-24. g. -------- ■«•«MJ, 10394 American Windmills Are New at Werk Pumping Water for Artifi cial Algerian Oases. PENDLETON BAKING CO. Insurance- strong American companies insuring against fire. The best Western .companies. Correct rates. Experienced business attention as- surred. IRRIGATE THE SAHARA DESERT Plante Affected by HIGH SCHOOL NIGHT A Dramatic Sketch by Members of the High School Student Body PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE "His Wife’s Friend” A Paramount Picture 7 and 9 P. M. - 20 40c Summons IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON For the County of Umatilla . F. B. Swayze and W. H. Simpson as Receivers of the Western Land and Irrigation Company, Plaintiffs, vs. J. Herbert Strohm and C. E. Joslyn, Defendants. TO J. HERBERT STROHM and C. E. JOSLYN, the above named de fendants: In the name of the State of Ore.: You are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint heretofore filed against you in the above entitl ed court and cause on or before the last day of the time prescribed in the order for publication of summons herein, to-wit, within six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons or within six weeks from the date of personal service up on you of a copy of the summons and complaint herein, If the same be served out of the State of gOregon; and if you fail so to appear and ans wer the plaintiffs will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint herein, to-wit for a judgement against J. Herbert Strohm for the sum of Seven Hundred Ninety Dollars and Sixty-eight cents ($790.68) with interest thereon at the rate of six (6) per cent per an num from February 1st, 1917, and for the costs and disbursements of this Euit, and for a decree adjudging the same to be a first lien upon the Southwest quarter of the South west quarter of Section 19; the Southwest quarter of the South west quarter of Section 30; and the South half of the North half of the Southwest quarter of the Northwest quarter of Section 30, all in Township 4, North of Range 28, E. W. M., together with the water right of one miners’ Inch for each acre of said land below the construct ed line of what is known as the ’’Hinkle Ditch,’’ under and by virtue .of the mortage executed and deliver- ed by J. Herbert Strohm to the Hink le Ditch Company on January 28, 1908, recorded in Umatilla County, Oregon, in Book 33 of Mortages at page 569, and foreclosing said mort gage and directing the sale of said premises and property In accordance with the law and the practice of said court and barring said defendants and all persons claiming by, through or under them, or either of them sub sequent to the 28th day of January, 1908, of all right, title, and interest in or to said premises or property save the right to redeem as provided by law. This summons is published pursu ant to an order of the Honorable Gilbert W. Phelps, Judge of said court, made and entered on the 11th day of December, 1920, directing the publication of summons herein by publishing once each week for six successive weeks in the Hermiston Herald, a weekly newspaper printed and published at Hermiston, Oregon. Date of first publication December 17th, 1920. W. S. Levens Baker, Oregon W. G. Drowley Vancouver, Wash. 14-7tc Attorneys for the Plaintiffs SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF STATE OF OREGON For Umatilla County THE O. Stangeby. Plaintiff, vs. W. M. Tutle, Defendant. To W. M. Tuttle, the above named defentant. * IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: you are hereby requir ed to appear and answer or otherwise plead to the complaint filed against you in the above entitled action in said court within six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and you are further notifi ed that if you fail to answer or other wise plead in this cause within the said time plaintiff for want thereof will take judgement against you for the sum of $342.39 with interest thereon from the date of filing of the complaint in said action and for his costs and disbursements in this ac tion. This summons Is published pursu ant to an order of the Hop. G. W. Phelps, Judge of the above entitled Court made and entered on the 13th day of December, 1920. The first publication of this sum mons is made on the 17th day of De cember, 1920 in the Hermiston Herald, W. J. Warner, 14-7tc. Attorney for Plaintiff. The French Restaurant BAKERY and CONFECTIONERY Elegantly Furnished Rooms in Connection STRICTLY FIRST CLASS Hohbach Bros., Proprietors Pendleton. Oregon • Gas. The effect on the growth of plants caused by ■ increasing the amount of carbon dioxide In the atmosphere has been tried, and the results are said to have been very promising. The gas, obtained in the process of smelt- Ing iron ore was supplied by pipes to an area of some seven acres, and the crops taken off this land were from 82 per cent upward greater than those from similar, but untreated plots. He Got the Job. “I want a boy to run errands." “1 kin do that,” said the freckle- faced applicant. “1 said ’run.* I don't want you to stroll.” “Yes, sir, I won’t stroll, except when I start to leave for the night. That will give you a chance to call me back if you think of anything else you want cone. Wednesday, January 19 Birmingham Age- Herald. PRE-INVENTORY SALE $10.00 $15.00 $18.00 $12.00 $ 9.00 Manicure Set . .......... $ Toilet Set ..................... _.... . Toilet Set . ....................... : Cut Glass Water Set ..... Cut Glass 8-in. Bowl .......... Other things in proportion. WM. H. OGDEN JEWELER & WATCHMAKER To the Wat End HERMISTON, OREGON 8.00 13.00 14.40 9.60 7.20