THE HERMISTON HERALD, LODGE DIRECTORY WE ARE NOW PREPARED TO ueen ESTHER CHAPTER No. 101, o. e . s .. Q meets second Tuesday evening of each month at 8:00 sharp in Masonic hall. V isiting members Exchange Your Temporary Liberty Bonds, First to Fourth, inclusive FOR PERMANENT BONDS WITH ALL INTEREST COUPONS ATTACHED welcome. Sue D. Dobler. W. M Kathryn L. Garner. Sec. LERMISTON LODGE NO. 138, A. F. & A M “ meets in Masonic IUII on First and Third Tuesday evenings of each month. V isiting breth c.W. Kellogg. Secy. T D. Worster, W. M VINEYARD LODGE NO. 206, L O. O. F ’ meets each Monday evening in Odd Fellow: hall. Visiting members cordially invitad. W. R. Longhorn. See. G. H. Myers. N.G PROFESSIONAL CARDS First National Bank OF HERMISTON J. A. PEED VETERINARY SURGEON House Phone 21 .........è----- Hermiston. Or . ----- .......... •-------- DR. K G. GALE Physician and Surgeon INSURANCE Office-Gladye Ave. near First St. Office Hours: 10 t 12; 2 to 4; 7 to 8. Phone 641 Surety Bonds Safety Deposit Boxes Travelers9 Checks DR. FRANCIS P. ADAMS Physician and Surgeon Eyes treated, tested and Glasses Fitted Office over First National Bank OFFICE PHONE. 92 RESIDENCE PHONE. 595 Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. m.; 2 to 5:80 p. m. Day or night calls answered promptly DR. W. W. ILLSLEY Dr. Freeze makes FOR SALE-—50 second hand sewing Office over First National Bank regular visits to Her- machines in good condition, or will Osteopathy Medicine Surger; miston. Consult him trade for hay, chickens, furniture, Calls answered at all hours free and be assured of or anything else we can handle. C. Office phone 551 Residence phone 711 good eye service. 36 E. Henley, Pendleton, or leave word with Mrs. W. B. Beasley, Hermiston. r 14-tfc. WANT ADS. WANTED D . F. V. PRIME DENTISTRY WE have some plan books out that we need. If you have one of these please return it. Tum-A-Luni Lumber Co. 19-t.''c WANTED—We are in the market for a few cars of No. 1 alfalfa hay FOR SALE— -Plano. Inquire C. Todd. at market price. Our office is open daily and we will be pleased FOR SALE—O. A. C. Strain to have growers call and see us. Plymouth Rock cockerels. W. A. Leathers. 21-tfc and 85.00. S. L. Carson. Fannie 9-tfc Barred 83.00 19-4tc WANTED—50 S. C. White Leg­ A complete stock of bath tubs, toilets, horn pullets or hens from a good wash bowles, and hot water tanks laying strain. P. O. Box 497, Her­ and fixtures. If we havent what miston. 20-2tp. you want, we’ll get it. Repairing and installing. I. E. Putman. WANTED Maternity nursing either locally or out of town. Inquire this office. 20-4tp. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS 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 Glasses ground to fit your eyes Fifteen years experience at your servio American Nat, Bank Bldg. Pendleton, Oregon Carpentering Repair Work No Job too large or too small for us to handle ALL WORK GUARANTEED CASH Paid for second hand goods. Correll’s Shop. 17-tfc T. L. Hall, transfer. Call Elliott’s Tire shop, phone 192. 19-tfc FOR SALE—20 Acres $1,400.00, 2 miles from Hermiston, half of Used Furniture, stoves, heaters and place levelled, house, other im­ ranges bought, sold, exchanged or provements. W. L. Kimble, Pom­ repaired. Correll’s shop. 7-tfc eroy, Washington, R. D. 21-5tp Elliott’s Tire Shop. L. L. BOYNTON PHONE 233 Get Your FRESH BREAD EVERY MORNING From Your THE feeling of security is well worth the premium paid. How about that Fire Insurance? See the E. P. Dodd Agency. 11-tfc Best Buy on the Project WHEN your subscription expires for FOR SALE—18 acres, 2 miles west Saturday Evening Post .... $2.50 of Umatilla on north side of R. R. Ladies Home Journal ...... 2.00 Country Gentleman ........... 1.00 track, river frontage; 11 acres in send your renewals to me. I only hay; good gardens on place; 3 get credit for the subscriptions I room house, 8X22 screen porch on Bend in. If you send it in I get no south side; good chicken house; credit. Leave part of the money home. Ed. H. Graham. 47-tfc good well of water; good milk house and cellar; two cows, one fresh now, other fresh in April; good mower; rake; wagon; spring­ tooth; plow; about 20 tons hay, and many other items. Every­ thing goes with place. Price >3,000. Will discount 8 per cent for all cash, or 81,000 down and 8 per cent on deferred payments. C. L. Bennett, Umatilla, Oregon. 21-tfc FOR SALE—Three dozen S. C. White Leghorn hens, good laying strain. Mrs. Z. Pumphry. 20-2tp. FOR SALE—Winesap apples, $1.50, you furnish container. H. E. Han- by. 20-tfc PRIZE Winning White Leghorn Cockerels for sale or trade. Price 83.00. Bernard Signs, Boardman, Oregon. 20-4tc. FOR SALE—Fine registered O. I. C. sow. Call at the Jewelry store. 19-tfc FOR SALE—IB b p. Alamo engine; Ford delivery body. See Harry Kelley. 51-tfe FOR SALE—Royal Typewriter, No. 10 in first class condition $50.00 10-tfc FOR SALE or Exchange—85,000.00 equity in two houses in Portland for good irrigated land near Her­ miston. Oeo. 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-tte 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 Cabinet Work Local Dealer PENDLETON BAKING CO. BARBERING By Skilled Journeymen Barbers SHOWER BATHS WM. SHAAR Real Estate, T. L. HALL TRANSFER Loans, PHONE 192 Insurance, Investments Elliott’s Tire Shop Leave orders at Land and City Property : Bought, Sold, Rented, Exchang­ ed and improved. Insurance-- HERMISTON AUTO TRUCK Strong American companies Insuring against fire. The best Western companies. Correct rates. Experienced business attention as- surred. TRANSFER Loans— Hollis Agency for Union Savings A 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. The French Restaurant Investments: 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. E. P. DODD Hermiston, Oregon BAKERY and CONFECTIONERY Elegantly Furnished Rooms in Connection STRICTLY FIRST CLASS Hohbach Bros., Proprietors • Pendleton, Oregon BUTTER WRAPPERS Printed to Your Order THE HERALD OFFICE HERMISTON, OREGON. WOMEN AS “PAMPERED TOYS" Distinguished French Abbe Makes Some Sharp Commentaries on Sex Relations in America. American women expect (very right­ ly) from tbelr husbands the same at­ tention which French husbands receive (roui their wives. The American bus­ band expects nothing, and for what he receives the Lord makes him truly thankful, writes Ernest Dinnet, tn Har­ per's. “We are pampered toys,” an Ameri- can lady told me in a distinctly resent­ ful tone, “but we only know It when our husbands, after keeping every trouble from us, suddenly die." If the abstraction called the Ameri­ can woman could be met with, I should ask her whether she really likes to see a dozen men tn her drawing room watch her the whole evening and bob up with military precision the moment she half rises to ring the bell ; whether she would not prefer her escort to think of what he Is saying to her in­ stead of concentrating on where she walks, skipping to the unprotected side of her the whole time; or whether she likes being supported across the road with infinite precautions, as If she were a very ill person or a very brittle object ; or, on the contrary, firmly grasped below the shoulder and wafted to the other side with the triumphant ease of long practice. I have kept a picture representing three exceedingly widely known Amer lean men watching a lady go down a deck stairway. She Is spoken of as a sportswoman and would probably think nothing of scrambling down a rope ladder if it amused her. The steps on which she appears are broad and comfortable, but the gentlemen with guiding and supporting gestures smile at her achievement with the same wonder and delight as if she were a baby for the first time off the go-cart. Meanwhile the lady herself smiles In her furs like coy Phoebe be tween two clouds. = THE PLAY HOUSE - Saturday, February 5 •813” I | “813” RAY] CHARLES ---- IN----- t(Red Hot Dollars” AL ST. JOHN » “Ship Ahoy” 2:30, 7 and 9 p. m. ===== === , - ----------- ======= , 20-40c : =—=============================== Sunday, February 6 WILLIAM DESMOND » “MINTS OF HELL” Sunshine Comedy—“A Lightweight Lover” 2:30, 7 and 9 15-35c ........ .................. = == ■ = - =..... == . . ■ ......... = ============= Wednesday, February 9 BILLIE BURKE -----IN — “Wanted—A Husband” PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE 7 and 9 15-35c RARE FRUITS IN PHILIPPINES Two That Aro Said to Be Delicious and Unknown In the Rest of the World. Among the productions of the Phil Ippine Islands are two delicious fruits almost unknown In the rest of the world. One of these is the durian whose remarkable qualities were des canted upon by Alfred Russel Wal lace during his explorations In the Malay archipelago. It grows on a lofty tree somewhat resembling an elm, Is about as large as a coconut, has a shiny shell, and contains a creamy pulp which com bines some of the flavor of a delicious custard with those of a fine cheese. To eat durians, we are told by those who know, is a new sensation worth a voyage to the East to experience. Americans In the islands call the du- rian “the vegetable Limburger cheese." The other rare fruit spoken of Is the mangosteen, said to be the only fruit that the governor general of the Is­ lands has never tasted. The exquis­ itely flavored liquid it contains can­ not be preserved for shipping abroad. Circulating the Scriptures. The 1919 issues of the American Bl- ole society were 3,752,309 volumes. The sun never sets on the representa­ tives of this society, which asserts that some one is busy every hour of the day and every day of the year cir­ culating the Scriptures. This total means that seven volumes were Issued every minute of every hour of every day of the year. The Issues of 1919 were the small­ est since 1911; chiefly because of after war conditions. The average of annual issues for the last ten years has been over 5,000,000 volumes. For the period of the war, 1914-1919, It was over 5,870,000, which means that on an average 11 volumes of Scrip­ tures were issued every minute of the years of the war by the American Bi­ ble society. ^813" COMING!! ^813" ^813" MONOPOLY LOST BY GERMANY American Chemists Are Now Produc­ ing the Rare Sugars Required for Scientific Purposes. Not least among the triumphs of the new American chemical Industry has been the production of the rare sugars, so long a German monopoly The sugars were called for by the small hospitals, as they are required in small amount In bacteriological laboratories—one of them, for In stance, being the most sensitive stim- ulent of typhoid growth, while oth ers serve In the detection of cholera germ. The infinite care necessary to prepare them in a state of absolute purity makes their cost seemingly enormous. The most expensive rare sugar catalogued Is stated by Drug and Chemical Markets to be dulcitol at $375 a pound, while mannose Is worth $140 a pound. This Is n dell cate and delicious sweet derived from manna, which is secreted In thin scale from certain trees and shrubs, and with which the children of Israel Were miraculously fed during their wander Ings In the wilderness. Xylose, quoted at $120 a pound, is made from the corn cob; Inulin Is obtained from the bulb of the dahlia at certain seasons of the year. Other rare sugars are—arlhi nose, at $100 at pound; levulose, $80 a pound, and raffinose, 875 a pound. Notice of Final Hearing Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned, as administrator of the estate of Fred A. Brunson, deceased, has filed his Final Account and Re­ port In said estate with the Clerk of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Umatilla County; and that the Judge thereof has fixed Monday, the 7th day of February, 1921, at the hour of 10:00 o’clock a. tn., as the time, and the County Court room in the Court House at Pendleton, Umatilla County, Oregon, ; the place for the hearing of ob­ jections to such final account and the settlement thereof. F. B. Swayze. Administrator of the estate of Fred A. Brunson, Deceased. Raley. Raley & Steiwer, Pendleton, Oregon. At­ torneys for Administrator. 17-5tc Notice for Publication Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at LaGrande, Oregon , January 15, 1921. Notice is hereby given that Walter I. Thorne, of Holdman, Oregon, who, in October 1, 1920, made Additional Homestead Entry, No. 019019, for NW% NE‘ and NY NW. Section 32, Township 5 North, Range 30 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three- ear proof, to establish claim to the and above described, before United Better Weather Forecasts. tates Commissioner, at Pendleton, Weather forecasts for months ahead regon, on the 15th day of March, will be possible within a few years as 1921. a direct result of solar observations. Claimant names as witnesses: It. M. Stewart, assistant director of Waller Thornton, Frank Brown, the Dominion observatory, told the Elias Thorne and Klye Guerrant, all Boyal Astronomical Society of Canada New Illuminator. The sun Is the great Influence over if Holdman, Oregon. C. S. Dunn, Prof. Alexander Silverman has In­ varying weather conditions on the vented a new Illuminator for the mi- earth, and recent observations of It 19-5tc Register. croscope, whose special advantage Is have led to the belief that observa­ that It gives a very strong light upon tories will be able to predict With ac­ WAXED Carbon paper that will not the object examined, so that opaque curacy the general trend of weather soil the hands for sale at the Her­ and translucent bodies can be as for six months or even a year ahead, ald office. readily studied as transparent ones be said. The top of the object on the side can To be able to foretell the amount Adding machine rolls of paper for sale at the Herald office. be seen with all the variations of Its of precipitation and the general surface. It is particularly valuable temperature for several months In If you would like to say something In testing samples of metals since It advance may take 50 or even 100 that would help this newspaper, just shows the presence of blow holes and years of observation, he added, but pits and much detail not hitherto expressed the confidence of the ob mention the fact Io your dealer that visible. It is likewise useful to tex­ servatory that this end would be you saw his ad In the Herald. tile experts since It shows the threads reached. LEGAL Blanks of all descriptions of a fabric from every angle and la also much appreciated by bacteriolo- for sale at The Herald Office. The Herald is your home paper. gists. There’s a Difference. “I resent the Imputation that I am a member of the 'pie brigade,'" said the pompous citizen. “But you don't deny that you want a government Job, do you?” asked Mr. Dubwaite. “Certainly not It should be the ambition of every patriot to serve his country.” “I agree with yon. It should be the ambition of every patriot to serve his country—without pecuniary re­ ward."—Birmingham Age-Herald. Strictly Business. He—Do you believe In fortune tell- Ing? She—Well, I don't know much about such things, but pepa believes In IL He—la It possible? She—Yea; be says the mercantile agencies are fairly accurate.— New Haven Register. WANTED A place to live among you that I may be able to serve you better. If you know of any place close to town let me know. WM. H. OGDEN JEWELER o WATCHMAKER TO THE WEST END Hermiston, Oregon