Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1923)
LODGE DIRECTORY I A MESSAGE TO YOUNG MEN Few modern business successes are recorded in which some bank does not play a part. The sooner you form a banking con nection, the greater w ill be your likelihood of achieving early success OPTI CERA F. B. 8 **7 1 « Présidant R. Alexinder Vice-President S. C. Lochrls Cashier W . L. Hamm, Aaa't. Cashier This strong Institution takes a whole-hearted Interest In the ambi tions and aims of its depositors. T alk to our officials about your plans. First National Bank of Hermiston Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profit» Over $59,000 NOTICE! T he H erald publishes more genuine paid want ads than any other paper published in a city of the same size in East ern Oregon. THERE’S A REASON MISCELLANEOUS STANDARD SERVICE STATION— location opposite Herald. FOR R E N T — 6 room bouse, 2 acres alfalfa, one acre in berries and garden. Garage, barn and chicken houses. Mrs. L. A . Phelps. 7-tfc. SEE J. L. HARMAN FOR Blaeksmithing of a ll kinds. AU W ork Guaranteed. Telephone <03. 6-tfc. FOR SALE— Office safe. Inpuire of W . A. Leathers. .— 26tfc Percey Sisters closing out sale March 25 to 31. — 26-4tc FOR SALE—The first little house No. of M. E. church. House to be moved. See W . A. Leathers. 26-tfc VO’ SALE OH BALE— 40 acres, partly 1m- proved Terms. W. i - Leathers. 26-tfc. SEE G. L. B E N N E T T for Auction- erring. Phone 42F2. 26-tfc. Coming, Millinery W ill be open In time for your East er purchases. W ait, Edith O. Copping- FOR SALE— An improved 20 acre 25-3tp. ranch 3 1-2 miles from Hermiston er. for particulars see C. H. Skinner. 1-tfc. ANYONE wishing to buy or trade for second hand Dodges or Fords, or FOR SALE— A good farm team and others, I w ill gladly demonstrate harness at a bargan. Also a 4 any time that I can get you one. horse fresno. O. O. Felthouse. 24tfc Small payment down and the rest on monthly payments.. L. Myron FRESNO SHOES $4.00 per pair. Smith. — 25tf Harmon’s Blacksmith Shop. 22-tfc. FOR SALE— 4 doz. W hite Leghorn pullets and hens. E. P. Dodd. 21-tfc FOR SALE— 1 1-2 doz. W hite Leg horn hens, also 1 1-2 doz. thorobred Rhode Island hens all good layers, also 1 thorobred Jersey bull com ing 2 years old. B. T. Locke, Colum bia district. 25-tfc. $ U ton Public Truck for sale cheap. Now on good gravel Job. Also has fla t rack for hauling wheat or baled hay. Inquire thia office. 13-tfc. We have a fine assortment of choice blooming plants and cut car nations at our greenhouse at the esat end of Gladys avenue. We w ill be prepared to furnish pepper, egg plant and other vegetable plants to gardeners In large quantities. Phone us your wants for anything in the floral or nursery line. W e strive to please. Mrs. Jay Pelraulder. 25-tfc FOR R E N T — Small alfalfa farm, house, orchard, berries, etc. J. H. Reid. 24-tfc. ONE THOROUGHBRED JERSEY Bull fer sale, coming 2 years old. REA L ESTATE EXCHANGES AN D INSURANCE. J. M. BIGGS, R E also one coming 2 years old, black ALTOR. 26-tfc Jersey helfsr, w ill be fresh In the summer. R. T. Locke, Colum bia district. 20-tfc. T Y P E W R IT E R Ribbons and carbon paper for sale at the Herald. FOR SALE cheap, team weight about 8afe Movlea 2500. Call F. S. Beddow. Phone A “movie” picture show In the home 42F13. 21-tfc. by the aid of a machine which has no FOR SALE— Range, dinning table, more to do with lights or Inflammable kitchen cabnet, bed room set, rugs things than a typewriter or a sewing and other articles. Phone 21F3. machine Is an accomplished fact. The “movlescope," the invention of Mrs. Augusta Cressy. 23-tfc. an Englishman, throws pictures on Its marvelous mirror simply by means of FOR R E N T — Ten acres of land In ordinary daylight or the artificial light cultivation; good buildings, one used to Illuminate the room. The pictures are seen with extraor m ile east of Um atilla. For particulars dinary clearness. It depends on the see Albert Atchison, Um atilla, Ore. 26tfc viewer—who Is also the operator— whether the picture Is a slow-motion affair or one of normal movement. FOR SALE— Two four-room houses In Hermiston. Term« $100 down, Leud-Toned Phone Used. A loud-speaking telephone Instru monthly payments of $25. H. E. Hanby. 2 7-tfc ment has been Introduced In England for factory and oiflce use, rendering FOR SALE— 3-inch Webber wagon It possible for the manager or fore and good hay rack. Same as new. man to speak to any part of the prem ises where an instrument is fixed with Price $100. Oto. H. Root. 27tfc out being near the transmitter or using FOR SALE— W hite Leghorn baby the hand micro-telephone. The replies from the outlying instruments are chicks. March, A pril and May transmitted qnlte clearly Into the room hatches. 1 or 500. R. L. Smith. without using a receiver, thus leaving Hermiston, Oregon. 27-tfc both hands free. FOUR GOOD FRESH COWS FOR sale. Price right and terms to right people an I am not prepared for dairying. E. P. Dodd 27-2tc FOR SALK— Ford track In A1 con dition. Price $250. See Earl Kingsley. 2 7-tfc FOR SALE— W eanling piga. Gilts for late farrow. Anything you w ant In the breeding line. C. C. Mason. 27-2te FOR SALE— W hite Leghorn eggs for hatching. Tancred strain, $l.$0 , setting of 15. L. C. Dyer, phone 711. 27-2tp F O R T T W hite Leghorn end R. L Red pullets, eholes stoek.now ley- tag: butcher prices. J. W . Camp- ta ll. 1 27 -lte FOR SAUE— Duroe-Jsrsey sours, w ill farrow hi week. Purebred. Phone I4F S . A . A. Paulsen. 27-tfe Bees for Sale— Address P. O. Box 1, Irrigon, Ore. 27-Jtg Mo. U. S. Army Shoes We have Just bought a tremen dous stock of Army Munson last shoas to be sold to the public d ir ect. These shoes ere 100 per cent solid leather w ith heavy double soles sewed end nailed. The up pers are of heavy tan chrome leather w ith bellows tongue, there by making them waterproof. These shoes are selling very fast and we advise you to order st ones to In sure your order blng filled. Th sises ere 6 to 11. all widths; price $2.75. Pay postman on re ceipt of goods or send money order Money refunded If shoes are not satisfactory. THE U. S. STORES CO, 1441 Bnadnay, NEW YORK C IT Y SALE OF BEAL PROPERTY W eaken Have trlbuted Largely to the Ranke si Famous Operatlo Artiste. | A foreign dispatch calls attention te a wonderful phenomenon which has been manifesting itself in the coal fields of Belgium and in other mining district* From the ranks of tits miners, the underground, molelike workers, there has come a series of great singers, not Just one or two, but a number. The great Dufresne, Boullllez, Anaseau of the Opera Comlque of Paris, Descamps, a fa mous Faust, and many others were sll miners. O f couse, we all know of the unusual rise to fame of the rol licking Harry Lander, whose Irre pressible lilting mirth had Its origin In a Scotch mine. But these conspicu ous examples are not all. I t Is re ported that In the coal mines of Liege the men have the habit of singing as they work, and often with magnifi cent effect Press agents for the great singers have been fond of telling how they learned their art from the birds. It Is their favorite story. But these miners have no such Inspiration. As far away as possible from the blue sky, the free air, the music of the birds and the leaves and the winds and the sea, they still dream of and produce music. I t seems paradoxical. But the human soul has its own music, as well as the winds and birds and other phenomena of nature. Possibly, It Is all the easier for this human harmony to escape In expression when It Is uninterrupted by music from without.—Ohio State Journal. Q McKay Creek Lands W e have 500 acres under the McKAY CREEK Res- ervoir System for sale. KILL GULLS WITH MATCHES Birds Are Poisoned In Search for Food Along Thames Embank ment at London. Proof that the average Londoner Is ardently fond of birds was furnished a short time ago when the report of the untimely death of several score of gulls out of the thousands that dally flutter over the foggy Thames was given prominent space In the metropolitan newspapers and called forth general Indignation. One of the oldest customs In Lon don Is the feeding of the gulls along the Thames embankment, where hun dreds of persons dally stand, throwing breadcrumbs Into the air and watch ing the swirling gulls catch the mor sels on the wing with nncanny ac curacy. The other day the bodies of a num ber of gulls were found floating In the river. An Investigation disclosed that some person, Instead of throwing breadcrumbs to the b ird* had fed them matches, the phosphorus ends of which poisoned them. Research In 8outh America. The Field Museum of Natural His tory Is equipping six expedition* Two will gather geological specimens from Brazil to Patagonia, while two others will study plant and animal life In Peru. Archeological Investigations will be pursued In Colombia and the Isth mus of Panama, and another party takes up the ethnology of the Malay peninsula. The gems and minerals of Brazil and the silver, copper, nitrate and vanadium deposits of Peru and Bolivia will be carefully explored. Specimens of pre-hlstoric vertebrate life will be sought In the Santa Cruz beds, and the great ground sloth and the pampas horse may be represented In the finds. The archeological expe dition alms at solving some of the mysterious Interrelations of ancient civilizations and may prove a connect ing link between the Maya and the Inca.—Scientific American. American Corn In Europe. Less corn was Imported In 1921 by the United Kingdom, France and Bel gium than during pre-war years, ac cording to Information compiled by the United States Department of Agricul ture, In 1921 the United Kingdom took 78,000,000 bushels, compared with an average of 83,000,000 bushels dur ing the five pre-war years, 1909-1913; France took 12,000,000 bushels, com pared with 19,000.000 bushels; and Belgium. 19,000,000, compared with 28.000.000. Canada and the Scandinavian coun tries, however, imported more corn In 1921 than during the pre-war years, Denmark’s Imports totaling 19.000,000 bushels, an Increase of over 70 per cent Long Amateur Radio Massage. AU long distance records for ama teur radio transmission were shat tered during the transatlantic tests of the American Radio Relay league, when the signals of two amateur sta tions were picked up In mld-Paclflc, 7,000 nantlcal miles distant, by R. K. Roesch, radio operator on board the steamship Easterner, It wag announced at league headquarters, Hartford. Conn. The stations heard were those of W. D. Reynolds, Denver, Colorado, And W. A. C. Heinrich of Aberdeen, Washington. Qovemmsnt Lumber In Alaska. Eighty-six per cent of the lumber nsed In Alaska Is cut from the govern ment forests, and Rltka spruce from the Tongass national forest Is finding an outlet In the markets of the world. The sawmill at Wrangell during the past summer made a shipment of 40,- 000 feet, board measure, of Rltka spruce for the London market, and an other lot of 450.000 feet, board meas ure, was shipped from Wrangell through Prince Rupert to eastern Seaside— Masons to build $15.006 home. Newport gets modern steam laun dry. La Grande plans to spend $200,000 bn municipal Improvements. Eugeee cannery building $4,i addition. Coquille to have $25,$00 hotel. ueen E sther chj In the County Court of the State of meets Mcand Tuesday all sharp la MaaontetolL VI» Oregon for Um atilla County. In art:0e » in n Mtania E. Su Kathrin L. Garner. See. the M atter of the Estate of Edgar N O T H IN G BETTER as to topography, soil and location in the Northwest and the price is the low est offered. H. Graham, Deceased. Notice Is hereby given that the un. ■deraigned Administrator of the Estate of Edgar H. Graham, deceased, w ill from and after the 17th day of March. 1923. at the office of W illiam J. W arner, in the city of Hermiston. U m atilla County, Oregon, offer for sale at private sale to the highest bidder for cash In hand, the follow ing described reel property situated In U m atilla County. Oregon, to-w it: Lots 7 and 8 In Block 10, and lots 1, 4, 5, 9. 10, 12, 13, 15 and 16 In Block 3, in Newport’s addition to the town of Hermiston, In said county and state. Bids may be made upon either of said lots or upon any group of lots as the bidder may deeire. This sale Is made under and in pursuance >f a license and order of sale made and entered by I. M. Schannep, Judge of I the above entitled court on the 7th VINEYARD LODGE NO. 10*. L O. 9 . P. to«. W. R. Loashorn. Sec. RECLAMATION LODGE N a 1ST, K. of P . meat« each Thursday avanht» at Mach’. Hall, at 7J0 P M. Visiting brothers cordially invited. W. H McMiUaa R. A. Browneee. K. R. end 9. C. C. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. R. G. GALE Physician and Surgeon ©dice—Gladys Ave. near First St. Office Hours: t t o 6; 7:30 to 9. PI mm MI DR. FBACIS P. ADAMS Physician and Surgeon Eyes treated, tested and Glasses Fitted Office over First National Bank OFFICE PHONE. 1« RESIDENCE PHONE. Mi Offiee Honrs: tl to 12 a. m.; 2 to 6J0 p. as. day of February. 1923, in the above Day dr night calls anoWei ed prbuptly Entitled estate, and such sale w ill be made subject to confirmation by DB. W. W. ILLSLEY said court. Office over First National Bank Dated this ICth day of February, Osteopathy Medicine Surgery 1923. Call» answered at all hour« Frank Waugaman, Administrator Office phone 661 Reaidenee phone Til of the above entitled estate. W . J. W arner, hts attorney. 23-5tc. D R .F .V .P R I M E NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior. U. S. Dentistry Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, Dental X-Ray and Diagnosis February 10, 1923. Bank Bldg. Office Notice is hereby given that W il Hermiston, Oregon Resid«Me »1 liam M. Pearson, of Hermiston, Ore gon, who on July 5, 1918, made W. J. W A RN ER Homestead Entry, No. 018955, for Farm U n it “H ” or W U S W U , S E U A ttoiney-at-Law 8 W U . Section -S. S E U B E U .Section 27, Township 5 North, Range 29 Hermiston ; : : Oregon East, W illam ette Merdtan. has filed notice of Intention to make final M c K enzie & lieuallen Proof, to establish claim to the land Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat above described, before United States Has removed from his former location in the Commissioner, at Hermiston, Oregon, Bond Bldg, to on the 6th day of April, 1923. Rooms 1, 2 and 3 Inland Empirò Bank Bldg. Claimant nameg as witnesses: Pendleton Oregon Thomas H. Haddox, W illiam B. Graham, Joseph W . Cralk, W illiam O. W hitsett all of Hermiston, Oregon. DR. THEO. BELETSKI Carl O. Helm, VETERINARIAN 23-7te. Register. Treat« A ll Domeatlc Animals. .Interstate Stock Inspector Residence at Stone’s Place $50 Reward BERT MULLENS IF I F A IL TO G ROW HA IR PRICES A R E A D V A N C IN G ON OTHER LANDS J. A. Kaavaa, N. G. The Particular Barber Oriental Hair Root Hair Grower Shop at Siscel's Confectionery World’s Greatest Hair Grower. Grows hair on bald heads. It must not be put where hair is not wanted. Cures dandruff — 5 2 0 3 and all scalp troubles. $1.75 per jar. J. L. VAU G H AN E lectric Fixtures and Appliances Phon« 139 ■ . C o u r t S t. P e n d le to n , O ro A g e n ts W a n te d Prof. M. S. Crosse ■W e Give S. & H. Trading Stamps* “ ------- I M 448 Logan Ave. W INNIPEG, M AN ITO BA W e will hold this for $40 per acre for your choice in 20 and 4 0 acre lots. PART CASH, PART TIME ta an acute attack o f N asal Catarrh. Those subject to frequent "cold." are generally ir. a "run down” condition. HALL'8 CATARRH M EDICINE Is a Treatm ent consisting of an Ointment, to be used locally, and a Tonic, which acta Quickly through the Blood on the Mu cous Surfaces, building up the System, and m aking you leas liable to “colds." Hold by drugglata for over 40 Years. F . J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo, O. £ J OAK TAN SHOE STORE Sam Rodgers, Prop. ■ ■ ■I H IT T -POR— GUNS —A N D - AMMUNITION EA SY TERM S Our new brick shoe store is now open ® with a new line of goods. See us for g SHOE REPAIRING SEE W e also have several fine spring buys ow ned by non residents in improved and partly improved p la ces. 20, 40 and 8 0 acres and ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I “ C O L D IN T H E HEAD** A FULL LINE Good Time £.31. Starei CONFECTIONERY STATIONERY Krause’s Chocolates Bur-Bee Bars The Best in Candies Neu)s stand Cigars and Tobacco to have that watch or clock repaired. Dodd Invest ment Co. HERMISTON OREGON Don’t Forget CALL 254 We do the best work and as reasonable as we can. For Hauling Wm. H. Ogden J s w a ta sod Watchmaker " O ft. That la s t” ■ ■ T. H. Gaither S D ra y a n d T ra n s fe r ® J