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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1921)
THE H E B M IS T O N HERALD, H E R M IS T O N , O R E G O N .' L O D G E D IR E C T O R Y Hay There!! ueen E sther chapter no . ioi . o . E. s ., m eat. .croud Tuewtey evrninK of oK h month At 8:00 .harp in M uonic hall. Vi.itinic member, welcome. Sue D. Dobler. W. M. Kathryn L. Garner. Sec. Q Y o u c a n in s u s e $ 1 0 0 .0 0 w o r th o f h a y f o r o n e y e a r a t a c o s t o f $3.00. LIKRI4ISTON 1-OBGE NO. 138. “ m eet. in Maaonic Hall on Tueaday evening, of each month. E V i i X L . Secy. T. D . I f t h e in s u r a n c e is n e e d e d f o r o n ly a fe w w e e k s o r a f e w m o n th s y o u p a y o n ly f o r t h e tim e i t is in fo rc e . V IN E Y A R D LODGE NO. 206. 1. O. O. F. ’ m eet, each Monday evening In Odd Fellow , hall. Visiting members cordially invited. W. R. Longhorn, Sec. Jack K n a p p . N . G . FIRST NATIONAL BANK . P R O F E S S IO N A L C A R D S J. A . P E E D o f Hermiilon, Oregon V E T E R IN A R Y SUK UEO N House Phone 21 PRICES REDUCED FOR The Ladies Home Journal ........ J1.50 Saturday Evening Post ............. 2.00 Renew your subscriptions through H. Peliflulder, Hermiston, Oregon, Phone 312. 39-tfc LOST AND FOUND LOST somewhere between postoffice and Percy’s millinery store, a key No. Yale 11214. Return to King 45-ltp. sley’s store. _ FOR SALE FOR SALE— New 6-foot hay slings, never used. A bargain. A. P. Ayers, Boardman, Oregon. 44-ltc. FOR SALE—-Dodge car, run 5000 miles. Price 1600. R. G. Banks, Route 1, Box 17. 44-3tp. FOR SALE— Yellow transparent ap ples. Green and w ’nd falls now. Ripe apples in two weeks. M. D. Scroggs. 43-tfc. FOR SALI4—Linoleum, dressers, kitchen cabinet, tent and folding cot, forks, shovels, pump jack, fruit jars, work harness, etc. Coi- rells Shop. 42-tfc. FOR SALE—Good team 5-year-old mares. Price is right. See A. W. Agnew. 34-tfc. FOR SALE— 3U in. Webber wagon with hay rack on. Good as new, O. O. Felthouse. 25-tfc FOR SALE-—Royal Typewrites, No. 10 in first class condition >50.00 10-tfc 4 A. V. A A . M h in t and Third Viaiting breth- W on ter. W. M Hermiston, Ore. D R . R . G. G A L E P h y s ic ia n a n d S u rg e o n Office-G ladys Ave, near Fir»» St. Office Hours: 10 to 12; 2 to 4; 7 to 8. TRUCK SERVICE I will run a freight truck to Pen dleton every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, other days by request. Will leave Hermiston 8:30 a. m. R. B. Spencer. Leave orders at City Mark- ct, phone 131. 45-2tp Phone 441 D R . FR A N C IS P. A D A M S Physician and Surgeon Eyes treated, tested and Glasses Fitted Office over First National Bank OFFICE PHONE. 92 RESIDENCE PHONE. 596 Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. m.; 2 to 5:30 p. m. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the County Court of the State of Day or night calls answered prompt), Oregon for Umatilla County. In the matter of the Estate of Ma DR. W. W. ILLSLEY urice A. Schram, deceased. Office over First National Bank Notice is hereby given the the un Medicine Surgery dersigned has been appointed ad Osteopathy Calls answered at all hours ministrator of the estate of Maurice Office phone 661 Residence phone 711 A. Schram, deceased, and has quail fled as the law directs. All persons having claims against said estate are DR. C. 0 . WAINSCOTT required to present the same to me Physician and Surgeon with proper vouchers, at the office of W. J. Warner, my attorney in X-Ray Specialist Hermiston, Oregon within six months Phones, Res. 889-J— Office 866 from the date hereof. Dated this 7th day of July, 1921. Office Rooms, 15-16-17 Bond Bld’g James H. Schram. Pendleton, Oregon 43-5tc. Administrator. HAY GROWERS We have a market for a few car loads of No. 1 alfalfa, for immediate shipment. We do not guarantee any defínate price, or advance any money, but will pay you all the money re ceived less our commission of 50c per ton local scale weights. All hay go ing to Portland is subject to State weights and grades, and when it grades No. 1 the top Portland price In most cases Is received. W. A. Leathers. 44-tfc. FOR SALE— 20 acres, Stanfield pro ject, 10 acres alfalfa, all fenced PROPERTY FOR TRADE 92 acres near Eugene for alfalfa rabbit wire, buildings and well. land. Stock and furniture also for sale. 85 acres well improved and stock Inquire this office. 42-tfc ed near Independence to trade for good alfalfa ranch. SOME Small Horses for sale cheap. 61 acres near Aurora highly de Shotwell Contracting Co. 32-tfc. veloped and fully equipped. Owner wants dry climate and alfalfa land FOR SALE— 40 acres in alfalfa, E. P. Dodd. 45-ltc. • priced very reasonable. W. W. Felthouse. 38-ttc RECEIVER’S NOTICE TO CREDITORS FOR SALE— About 15 weaned pigs. Notice is hereby given that the Ed. Haugeberg. 43-2tp. United States District Court for the District of Oregon has ordered that FOR SALE— Small range, White sew notice be given requiring all credit ing machine practically new, ors having claims against the West princt:<3 dresser and a few smaller ern Land & Irrigation Company to items. Call Oregon hotel. 43-tfc. present the same to F. B. Swayze and W. H. Simpson, receivers for said FOR SALE— Good family milch cow. company heretofore appointed by thf C- V. Wilson. 43-tfc. above entitled court In a suit where in The Central Trust Company et a) FOR SALE— Four small Duroc-Jersey are complainants and the Western pigs. C. H. Miller. 43-tfc. Land & Irrigation Company et alt are respondents, for approval and al FOR SALE— Good work horse cheap. lowance on or before the 15th day of Win. H. Ogden. 40-tfc. August, 1921. Notice is therefore given to ab FOR SALE— Used four frame honey creditors and other persons having extractor In good condition. Al claims against the Western Land & so comb honey suppers ready to Irrigation Company to present the use. Will take honey In trade. J. same to the undersigned Receivers Skovbo. 44-3tc. at the First National Bank at Her miston, Oregon, on or before the 15th day of August, 1921. FOR SALE— Aero motor windmill F. B. Swayze, and steel tower, wheel 8 feet in W. H. Simpson. diameter, tower 20 feet high, 1 Receivers. 44-4tc wide wheel McCormick mower. 1 new iron wheel truck wagon, 1 THOU ART THE MAN IS 8 inch vineyard plow, 1 No. 12 De Laval separator, li 'team, of COMING TO PLAY H0USF mares and harness, 1 3 horse pow er "Z” type kerosene en g in e,. 1 Can a man be "caught with the Acme power chopper, or will trade for cows, weaned pigs or brood goods" an.l yet be Innocent? It hap sows. W. A. Ford, Umatilla. 45- pens that way In “Thou Art the tfc. Man” the Paramount Artcraft photo play In which Robert Warwick is to MISCELLANEOUS nppear at the Play House next Sun AM SHIPPING mixed car of stock day, July 24. The story deals with illicit dia August 6. Book your stock with F. A. Chezik. 45-ltc. mond traffic In South Africa. The hero a soldier of fortune Is in love WORK WANTED either by day or with a girl whose brother is engag hour, Mrs. B. C. Eaton, half mile east of city limits. 45-ltp. ed in the crooked business. The latter uses his sister’s sweetheart, unbeknown to him, as a means of Elliott's Tire Shop. getting his loot to his agent. When FOR SALE or trade In on good cows the hero is apprehended by the law 6 turkey hens, about 90 young ihe stolen diamonds are found upon turkeys weighing up to four lbs.; a'so one brood sow due to farrow him, and he serves a jail sentence July 20. C. J. Vollva. 442tp. rather than betray the girl. But everything turns out happily event CASH Paid for second hand g o o d s . ually. • Correll’s Shop. 17-tfc Lois Wilson is the leading woman T. L. Hall, transfer. Call E lliott’s Thomas Heffron directed the picture, Tire shop, phone 192. 19-tfc which is a Paramount Artcraft. Used Furniture, stoves, heaters and GIRL’S STATEMENT WILL ranges bought, sold, exchanged or HELP HERMISTON repaired. Correll's shop. 7-tfc Many women will profit by the fol THE feeling of security Is well worth lowing statement of one of their «ex: the premium paid. How about “I was afraid to eat on account of that Eire Insurance? See the E. stomach trouble. Even rice ùiù uut P. Dodd Agency. 11-tfc agree. After taking Adler-l-ka I can A complete stock of bath tuba, toilets, eat anything.’’ Adler-l-ka acts on wash bowles, and hot water tanks BOTH upper and lower bowel, remov and fixtures. If w» havent what ing foul matter which poisoned stom you want, w e’ll get it. Repairing ach. EXCELLENT for gas on the and Installing. I. E. Putman. stomach or sour stomach. Guards Phone 7*3. against appendicitis. It brings out poisonous matter you never thought YELLOW Transparent Apples are was in your system. Mitchell Drug ripe. Cnls 50c per box Choice, Pd Adv >1 per box. M. D. Scrofgs. 4{-ltp. Company, D r . F . V . P R I M E D E N T IS T R Y Hermiston. Oregon Office, Bank Bid». Office Phone, 93 Office Hours Residence Phone 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. J. D . Z Ü R C H E R LAW YER Stanfield - - Oregon Dr. Dale Rothwell O ptom etrist an d O p tician The S tory of Pound’s Theater The Play House Our S ta te s 1 UMATILLA. OREGON HERMISTON. OREGON By JONATHAN BRACE XXXVII.— NEBRASKA HE Indian name for th e Platte river was Ne braska, mean ing “shallow water,” and fro n t t h is came the name of the state. A nickname for the state Is the Blackwater State. Of the early Spanish explora tions little Is known, exeept that Coronado probably reached the great plain of this region In 1541. More than one hundred and twenty-five years later Father Marquette noted the Platte river on his trip up the Missouri. In the beginning of the Nineteenth century the Lewis and Clark ex pedition skirted the boundaries of the present state and in 1805, Manuel Lisa established the first known settlement which was a fur trading post at Bellevue. This was just after the Louisiana Purchase had brought Nebraska into United States territory. Omaha was established as a post of the American Fur com pany In 1825 and Nebraska City the following year. With the California gold rush In 1849 many pioneers passed through Nebraska and some stopped and settled there al though there was a law forbid ding settlements among the In dians. Tlte real colonization boom, however, started with the passing of the Kansas-Nebraska act in 1854, which arranged that these two sections should become free or slave states at the dic tate of their inhabitants. The Nebraska territory was then or ganized and reached from the fortieth to the forty-ninth paral lel. In 1861, the region north of 43 was made into Dakota territory. The Idaho territory was also created, which re duced Nebraska to Its present size of 77,520 square miles, ex eept for a slight addition in the Northwest which was made in 1882. In 1867 Nebraska was admit ted ns the 37th state over the president’s veto. It has eight presidential electors. T (© b y McClure N ew spaper Syn dicate.) Glasses ground to fit your eyes Fifteen years experience at your service A m erica n N at. Bank B ldg. P e n d le to n , O reg o n T he S to ry of Our S ta te s T. L .H A L L By JONATHAN BRACE C PH O N E 192| Leave orders at Elliott’s Tire Shop HERMISTON AUTO TRUCK TRANSFER 182] J Hollis Percey, Prop. 'Hermiston. Ore. »■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■J ¡ J . L .V A U G .I I A N S s ■ j E U eO T K IC F IX T U R E S ■ A N D A P P L IA N C E S ‘ 2O S W. C o u r t Phone 139 g S t. g R o n d lc to n , O re . I ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ T w o Trucks MUST BE KEPT BUSY I can give you better service and cheaper rates than ever before. Will haul anything. Baled hay a specialty. 0 . 0 . Felthouse :: Phone 404 Herm iston Barber Shop UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT MKT MULLINS. Frap. Ageet far Domestic Laaadry Haskel leave« Tuesday, returns Saturday A «hare of Your Patronage Solicited OLORADO is th e most precious of our states, for In the m in in g o f gold and sli ver it sur passes ull other States, produc ing about one-third of the total output of the entire country. In fact, its real history starts In 1858, when gold wus first dis covered. Prior to that time there had been but little settling in this region. Spunish explorers had traversed the country In the lat ter part of the Eighteenth cen tury, and laid claim to It. As a part of the Louisiana Purchase it came Into the possession of the United States In 1803. Offi cers of the United States army were sent out to explore this wilderness among whom were Lieutenant Pike in 1806, and It was after him that Pikes Peak was named. In 1819 Colonel Long made extensive explora tions and he was followed In 1842 by Fremont, whose activi ties in the Mexican war brought him into much prominence. At the close of the Mexican war, Mexico ceded her rights to this territory to the United States, hut it was considered a barren waste and unattractive for set tlers. Then in 1858 came the dis covery of gold in the bed of Dry Creek, a few miles south of where Denver now stands. The following spring tens of thou sands of men flocked into what was then called the Pikes Peuk country. In 1859 Denver became a town of one thousand Inhabi tants, and by the next year hud grown Into a big city with news papers, theaters, and a govern ment mint In 1861 the Territory of Col orado was created and In 1870 Colorado wus admitted as the thirty-eighth state of the Union. Its area Is 103,948 square miles and Its population entitles the state to six presidential elec tors. The name Is taken from the Colorado river, and is a Spanish adjective meaning “colored red.” Colorado Is often called the Centennial 8tate, as It wss ad mitted to the Union Just one hundred years after the Declara tion of Independence. < © by M e C la r . N e w e p a p e r S y n d ic a te ) SH OW ER BA TH S Subscribe for The HersM Saturdhy, July 23 DOUGLAS Mac LEAN and DORIS MAY —In— D o u glas M acL ean In “L et’s B e F a sh io n a b le ” “Let’s Be Fashionable” Sunday, July 24 ROBERT WARWICK IN “Thou Art the Man” Wednesday, July 27 ENID BENNETT in COMEDY-“ Hevit Fase” ’The Woman in the Suitcase’ 15ç A Good Show Every Friday 8:00 P . M. 15-35c 7:30-9:15 E Q U IP M E N T -- Plus Mechanical Skill That’s the combination th a t gives satisfaction. A car penter can’t do good work without good tools, neither can a garage. We have the equipment, plus mechanical skill, and our work isthe best advertisement we have. 2 0 Per Cent Reduction in »* Tires F. Neil & Barker Co. XXXVIII.— COLORADO T R A N SF E R .F M O N K F r id a y , J u ly 22 Wo Weld Anything but A Broken Heart Hermiston, Oregon Phone 264 G et Your L oose W h eels T ight AT- FLO YD KNERR Two door« east Ore. Hdwe. Co. Two door« aa.st Ore. Ildwe. Co. W h e n yo u b a k e a p ie do you ever atop to consider that for the same money and no work at all you ran buy a high grade pie from us? W h en y ou b a k e a c a k e * It coat« you as much an you would pay ua to bake It for you and we guarantee that our cake will please your moat faatidiouH gueat. W h en you b a k e bread aome o f that bread willZbe'old before you ran poaaibly use it up. You'get our bread freah every day--and you pay no more. C IT Y B A K E R Y Oregon H otel C afe A B ETTER PLACE T O E A T B r e a k f a s t a n d D in n e r a la c a r t e Under the management of M RS. M IL L IE Yes, We Do Job Work You will find our prices satisfactory Come in D ECK , P ro p . ■THE Merchants B who advertise In this paper will give yon best values tor your money. ADDING macblnfi roll? »* pffice H*r*M