The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, April 10, 1924, Image 4

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    THE
H E B M IS T O B I
HERALD,
Ki/ JtMHterf B F y Electricity
/o r 8,000
LOCAL AND PERSONAL
■ BREVITIES ■
S tr a w H a ts
K u t e K u ts
K a h k i P a n ts
D r e s s S h ir ts
Big Yank Work Shirts
Munsing Summer Wear
TH EY A RE A LL
N EW
Occurences a f I n t e r n Gleaned H e n
i A bout the O ita a»d
leiakborhood
Tin, Sheet metal work and Plumb­
ing. Call 7«1. L E. Putman. U -tfe.
Mise F re ld a Campbell Is spending
a few weeks in P o rtland where she
w ill attend the banquet given by
the Gamma Sigma fra te rn ity of the
Pacific U n iversity.
F. P. Phipps, president of the Co.
lum bla F arm Bureau, was recently
elected vice-president of the county
bureau.
_
. . ~
~~
Bourd and lodging for tw o w o rkin g
men, *8 .4 0 per week; a ll you can
eat guaranteed. En qu ire thia office.
—- ■ ■
— —
Mrs. W illia m S h arr le ft S aturday
night for P o rtland where she w ill
spend several weeks w ith her sister.
Mrs. Oren F elt house’s mother, Mrs.
Stevens, has returned to her home
In W eiser. Idaho.
M r. G a ith e r and Mr. H o rn in g were
Pendleton visitors the firs t p art of
the week.
Miss Ruby Scott returned
F rid a y m orning.
O t t o C. P ie r c e
K I N G S L E Y ’S
H E R M IS T O N 'S
IN C .
H O U S E O F Q U A L IT Y A N D S E R V IC E "
W h at P a rk e r’s S tore Says
Everybody wants good things to
eat.
We
have
them.
Groceries,
home
For the next
few days special prices on canned
goods and some real bargains to
offer. Ask to see them when you
are in the store.
THE STORE WITH THE BLUE FRONT
=*‘Thc West Side Eat Shop’ — •
J. Lee Parker, Proprietor
Telephone 413
■onia
A new and onuanal application of
electric beating was made recently
when electrically barbecued beef was
served to live thoaaand people at the
annual round up and celebration ai
Ephrata. Washington. Wa learn ftim
Electrical World M a t four atders
weighing about two thousand pounds
where they visited friends.
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M r. Campbell has rented the E m -
m ett Crocker house on Gladys ave-
M r. Campbell
is
the local
I Standard O il manager.
Ross N ew po rt was in tow n from
I Portland last week.
He states th a t
'Is w ork a t O ntario is almost fln -
[ lshcd.
OREGON.
T& utell ’ em
each were dressed and prepared for
the barbecue and roasted la a large
electrically-heated pit built especially
for the occasion. The Improvised oven
was 32 feet long. 4 f e e t wide and
6 feet deep. Twelve heating element*
each of 3 kilow att capacity and con
aisiing of about 150 feet of No. 14 Iron
wire were placed one foot above the
bottom of the pit. Sheet-Iron beat de
Het tore were placed one foot above
the heating elements, and a foot and
th e
d e fle c to rs
wer«
placed Iron bars to hold the beef
Thermostatic control was provided to
maintain an even heat In the pit.
The meet waa first roasted nt a tern
perature o f 550 degrees for two hours.
The heat was then reduced to 350 de
greea and maintained at this point for
four hours. For the next six hours
the temperature ranged from 250 de
greos to 300 degrees. At midnight the
meat had been roasting for twelve
hours, and the temperature was then
reduced to 200 degrees and held tlieie
for twelve hours until the time of the
barbecue.
[ t
r n à j b e lr u < *
th ô 't w o r r j k ills
m o r e p e o p l e Ih ô j?
w ork " b u t ïîa p rob :
because y o u h ave creuru o r b u tte r, w h ic h b rin g
prices, to sell fo r cash, g iv in g a good, s te a d y inco m e. Y o u
also h av e s k im -m ilk , a w o n d e r fu l feed fo r calves, pigs a n d
chickens, a ll b rin g in g in m o re m o n e y , a n d y o u k e e p th e
f e r t ilit y o f y o u r soil on th e fa r m .
because
h to re p e o p le
B u t th a t isn’ t a ll. A D e L a v a l b rin g s in m o re m o n e y
because it gets a il th e c re a m , because it doesn’ t w a s te it in
th e s k im -m ilk , because i t w i l l g iv e m o re y e a rs o f service,
because it is m o re c o n v e n ie n t to c le an a n d o p e ra te , a n d
because it separates a rich er s m o o th e r a n d h ig h e r te s tin g
c re a m . T h a t ’s w h y th e re a r e o v e r 2 , 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 D e L a v a !*
Albumen From the Lupin
Seed Make» Good Food Lighthouses in Italy
to Be War Memorials
Not only In the Mediterranean re­
gion, but also along the western const
—— —
of America there grow freely tall,
M r. W m . Sharr. spent Sunday In handsome spikes of blue-white or yel-
Portland or, business.
low flowers that form entrancing bits
_______
of color In the landscape during the
D r. P rim e made a business trip
season for blossoming, and are not In­
to Pendleton Saturday.
frequently used as a garden flower.
It 13 the lupin, which belongs to the
—
—
~
’ j
c .
j
fam ily o f leguminous vegetables to
Dave Cook and H a rvey Cook made
l
_
, j
l
.
.
1 .
.
which mankind owes so much, and
a business trip to La G rande Sunday, which Includes beans and peas as well
-----------
as peanuts.
D r. and Mrs. H o lt of Pendleton, | As In other members of the family
spent Sunday w th the
Todd's
In the fru it of the lupin consists of
Herm iston.
seed-bearing pods, but no attempt has
been made to use them eltner for for-
or for human food until recently.
M r. and Mr». O. n
i .
„
4
a «
.
I t is now announced that by a German
| fa m ily motored to Pendleton Sunday procP88, (he Pol)| method of exfractl(,n.
Vegetables, Smoked Meats and Fresh
Meats of all kinds.
H K B M iB T O fl,
said (0 j,e quite Inexpensive, the seeds
can be made to yield an uncommonly
high percentage of albumen, which,
added to rye or other flour, makes an
extremely nutritious food.
^ I s new bread Is likewise admi­
rably fitted to form part of a diet of
certain
(presumably diabetic)
pa­
tients because of the small amount of
starch It contains.— L iterary Digest.
W hat She Was A fte r
Mrs. Sklfflngton, during the course
Mrs. A nna Strohm w ill occupy the o f an afternoon call on Mrs. Biffing- i
horse on Gladys avenue owned by j “ ” >• sought the latter’s advice as to j
F. L. K e lly .
Mrs. K e lly w ill leave »PP'.vIng for divorce.
w,
»„ he „ w , th
l
m ,.
n„
Mrs.
Blfflngton.
>on to
M
r. v
K elly.
.. "W ell, , said
,
. .
. , 7. , npon
.
the conclusion of her friend s lengthy
■
j recital of her woes, “you have had
M r. and Mrs. E. J. Kingsley were y(,ur m arital troublea Just like the rest
| In Herm iston the last of the week.
of us; but really, dear, to Judge from
_______
whnt you have told me, I am not nt
T ilttle Louise Schlmke, d aughter all sure that you would be Justified In
of M r. and Mrs. John Schlmke. Is re . taklnS thIs steP- You have no other
covering from an a ttack of pneu-1 «ro".n d i for seekln* 8 dlvorce’ ba' e
i you ?'
monla.
Mrs. Sklfflngton hesitated a moment,
and then added: “To tell the truth,
Mrs. W . W . Felthouse has re tu rn - , in addition to what I have Just said,
I »d from P o rtland , where she has I have a brother who Is a lawyer and
been fo r Some tim e In the Portland I »m very anxious to give him some-
' Me leal hospital.
i tllln8
do.’’— Farm Life.
in use, a n d w h y th e y have w o n m o re th a n 10 0 0 g ra n d
prizes.
T h e n e w D e L a v a l is lie tte r th a n e v e r. I t has the n e w
S e lf-C e n te rin g B o w l, lig h t ru n n in g q u a litie s , a ll-a ro u n d
s u p e rio rity a n d g re a te r con v e n ie n c e , w h ic h m a k e it b y fat;
W hile nearly every town pnd village
in Europe has erected memorials of
one kind or another In honor of the
soldiers who fell in the World war,
Italy enjoys the distinction of being
the first of the nations to commemo­
rate the heroism Hiid sacrifice of life
of their sailors by erecting lighthouses.
The funds for these appropriate
monuments are being raised by a com­
mittee composed of the leading Italia n
admirals and officers of every rank
representing the navy service, together
with a [licked number of army gen­
erals and statesmen, says the Wash­
ington Star. Thus far $000,000 has
been subscribed, and by way of be­
ginning three great lighthouses of the
purest white marble, 80 to 100 feet
high and Roman In style, are in the
course of construction at the most
conspicuous and useful points of the
coast, dominating the Adriatic, the
Tyrrhenian and the Ionian seas.
The very powerful lights will cast
their rays through the bars of an an­
cient bronze “ara” or altar. It Is In­
tended to dot the whole eoastline of
the Italian peninsula, of Sicily and of
Sardinia with memorial lighthouses of
this kind _______________
the
best s e p a ra to r y o u can b u y
v
Oregon H a rd w a re & Im plem ent Co.
*K»MW
WE WILL HAVE A FEW
FIR STACKER POLES AND A
STOCK OF DERRICK LUMBER
A D ifferen t M a n
IN THIS WEEK
Kent
Housewife— Ain’t you
the
same man I gave a mince pie to last
Christmas?
Tram p— No mum, I ’m not and wots
more the doctor says ! never will
he.
IF YOU EXPECT TO BUILD
A STACKER THIS YEAR IT
WOULD BE WELL TO ENGAGE
THE MATERIAL NOW
A L E X M ANtYiNG
C a n d id a te F o r R epubb an N om ­
ination F or
SHERIFF
MATERIALLY YOURS,
TUM-A-LUM LUMBER CO.
R. A. BROWNSON, MGR.
Born in U m a tilla county
5 years ex­
perience as an officer. Served w ith
2nd Ore. Reg. In the I ’b ’Ulptnes. 5
years in this county as ? tcaehor.
P rim a ry electon M ay 16, 1S24.
( P a id A d v e rto iseic.cn I)
Mrs. W . W . Ills lc y has returned
from B aker w here she has been v is it-
ing her parents.
Competent Guide
A «ronP of motorists from Washing-
I ,nn C°t lost In Druid H ill park In Bal­
t,more They w#r# try ,ng (o mnke |he
_
. . . . . .
.
I ’imllco racetrack, which la situnted
Several Hcrm lstonians
w ent
t o < , .
..
.
. . . . .
, .
! Just on the edge of the Mnrylnnd me-
Pendleton for the declam atory con- tropo„ g. 8o they ha,|ed a policeman,
testa last F rid a y evening.
"Cnn you tell us how to get to the
--------------------------------racetrack ?"
DOKKIE
DANCE
EiaiMiiiaiiiiaiaaiiiiiiiiaiaiaisaa2r.><
F o r S ale—Big Six M cCormick
The offlcer was deliberate in his re-
m ow er in good shape. C h a s ., p% 0 yoo 8ee tb, t gent on tbe eor
To you—he’s worth
$ 2 , 5 0 0 in Prizes
H E du Pont Company Is offering *2,300 in mar-
chandise prizes for taam and individual scores In an
International Crow-Shooting Contest Sportsman in the
United Stites and Canada are aligibls.
The crow is a destroyer of growing crops and of gams
birds. Ha la a menaça and a nuiaanca. Get him I
8end for two, free booklets trlling all about tha crow.
It coats you nothing to enter the contest. W rits today
for full information.
T
E. I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS
A CO., INC.
S p o r tin g P o w d e r D w irio n
W IL M IN G T O N , D E I .
” a re -
_______________
81-otp ner.»
he asked,
"the one with
the
a
GIVEN BY THE BOKOES
OF PENDLETON
i see<ly w” t’ the form ,hee' ' “ cklng ou‘
of Ids pocket, and his shoes run down
Bt the heel?”
"Yes, we see him."
A hundred years ago the electro
"Follow him.”— Louisville Courier-
magnet was born. Its Inventor was
Journal.
William Sturgeon, a soldier at Wool
w hh, near London. As n Ind he fol- '
------------------------------
loved his fnther’s trade ns n shoe-
Ingenious Diving Suit
maker, and he never regretted It. for
Improvising a diving apparatus from
sboemaklng taught him to use Ills i an old household hot-water tank,
eyes and fingers with uncommon I fifteen years of rubber tubing, a length
power.
In hours of leisure he was 1 of heavy chnln and a discarded beer
During the dance the Dokkie P at­
food of experiment. He noticed that i pump. W alter Merwin of Perth Am-
soft Iron was magnetic only while boy, N. J„ has become a auccessfnl rol Team, in full uniform, will give
In contact with a steel magnet. When commercial diver, according to Popu-
n
he severed them the soft Iron In­ ular Science Monthly.
A FREE EXHIBITION DRILL
a
stantly lost Its attraction It occurred
Merwin Is the submarine member of
«
to hlip to place a core of soft Iron a firm that salvages metal Junk from
FI
within an electric coll. At once that vessels about to be scrapped. H e as-
a
core *eenme a magnet of uncommon sorts he can make deep dives with his
ies
strength. When he broke the current homemade ault, and that the outfit Is
the mngnetlsm of the soft Iron van- perfectly safe.
shed.
He created the electro-mag-
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1 ----------
Eyer>body Come
n*L
She H ad H eard Comments
The American physicist, Joseph
x t a private entertainment a guest
Henry, greatly Improved the device
just risen from the ptsno.
BOB FLETCHER S ORCHESTRA
of Sturgeon. That Inventor had wound
"Would yon Jlke to be able to sing
only one coll o f copper wire around ' Hnd p|av ng
do, dear?” alie asked a
Iron core, using varnish on the
Iron ns a means of Insulation Henry
"No, ma'am.”
surrounded the coll core with several
♦
“And why not?"
close colls covered with silk thrend,
" ’Cause," explained the little girl,
obtaining n much more powerful “I wouldn't like to have people say
magnet than that o f Sturgeon. From such horrid things about me.”
♦
the very beginning of telegraphy the
20 A C R E S W E L L IM P R O V E D . B ES T ♦
electro-magnet has been the very
Babies W anted
land. *7 5 0 cash, value *2 2 5 0 ; easy ♦
heart of the apparatus. A momen­
The small girl met the doctor near
terms.
tary current la received from a dis­
♦
her home.
tant station In a coll o f copper w ire ;
“You brought a little baby next
that Instant Its soft Iron core becomes
♦
door, didn't you?" she Inquired.
a magnet, and In attracting ita arma­
“Yes,” he answered; "shall I bring 20 ACR E S. HO CSE, S T A B L E , F E N C - ♦
ture gives a signal
one to your house?"
'e d . sm all tra c t in a lfa lfa . *1 0 0 0 .
In telephones ns well as In tele­
“No, thanks,” came the prompt re­
♦
graphs, In dynamos and motors. In
Term s.
ply. "W hy. we’ve scarcely tim e even
♦
automatic printers and a host of other to wash th*_doj."
♦
Inventions, electro-magnets command
motion and rest Instantly, strongly and
♦
JO A C R E S, H O U SE . B A R N . C L E A R .
W anted to
dependably.
♦
ed, ready to go; *8 0 0 .
The w ife of s certain bishop had
♦
The M. E. Ladles have a new sup­ given a long and sympathetic ad­
dress to a number of women from
ply o f bias tape on sale at the home
H a v e several good trades from ♦
the east end of Ixmrioa on the ques­
■f Mrs. W a t e r Blessing.
2 *-3 *e tion of making the life of the home '.o th er parts of Northw est,
H erm iston
Sat. Night, Apr, 12
DON’T MISS IT!
Oil
Stoves
SEE US FOR THREE STYLES
THAT EMBODY ALL UP-TO-DATE
OIL STOVE FEATURES.
Electric W ashing Machines
$15.00 DOWN AND $15.00 MONTH­
LY. NO INTEREST, EQUALLING
CITY TERMS.
SA PPER S’ INC.
□
a
’3
COMMERCIAL PRINTING
OF ALL KINDS
happy and peaceful—especially peace-
fu l-
,
Christian Sciatce Services
held in rooms next to the A u d ito riu m
ev<iy Bunday at
1 fl o c'oek.
WR> <wertwm,
.
Sunday
f
aritnol at J O ; II,
A ll a re c o r d ia lly i
-x il very welt, hut why didn't she"
InMtrtl t». attend. - Wedueeday e v e -» ,,, mtn detail?
For lMtane< *
n|hg ntyeting first ^Wednesday rarh I should tike to know what she does
ntaatii,
X
-•
A
« -
T j s «
/
I - .J
♦
♦
♦
1
drunk.”
L5Í.
I
h*r
oM
E. P. DODD
♦
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♦
♦
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♦
♦
T h e dollar ie as big as ever— I t ’s
th e things we buy th a t have shrun k.
B u y here— we guarantee th a t you
w ill get. More Real V alu e for every
d o lla r you. spend.
I f you don't know w hnt to serve fo r
dnner, why aot come in and see us?
W e have Just Svhat you w ant In
♦
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Buying here will eUaalnate
♦
of trouble” and
♦
delightful.
♦
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;
4
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CITY MEAT MARKET ♦ ♦
♦
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♦
JOHN ELLIS. PROP.
♦
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♦ ♦
♦
Hermiston, Oregon
j
YOU TCLL CM
❖
Knew
■
a a
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ '■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a a iB B B B B B B B B B B B B B
Afo
♦
J
a
THE HERMISTON HERALD
SNAPPYBUYS ♦
T he C h ristian -idlenre services ere
* r
a
How Sturgeon
Invented
* " ’1
„
,
„
. .
the Electro-Magnet
HIGH QUALITY MEATS
atty "tim e
make your days more