The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, May 01, 1924, Image 4

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    THE HEBMISTOK HERALD» HERMISTON, OREQpK.
W
m.
LOCAL ANO PERSONAL
■ BREVITIES ■
S tr a w H a ts
O
— w W lawns« OlMMd Han
aodTfcw. Abwt tb. City sad
hot
K u te K u ts
Tin, Sheet metal work and PJumb-
ng. Call 713. L
Putman, li-tte .
B.
S. M. Campbell, the new manager
of the local Standard Oil atation
has moved hla fam ily from Prine-
| rille to Hermiston and has' rented
the Crocker house.
K a h k i P a n ts
D r e s s S h ir ts
Mr. and Mrs. Bentha Howard re­
turned recently from Milton where
they have been visitin g at the home
i f Mr. Howard’s father.
B ig Y a n k W ork Shirts
THEY ÁRE ALL
NEW
O tto C . P ie r c e
I
H e ^ M Ig T O N 'B
H O U S E
O F
IN C .
Q U A L IT Y
A N p e g W V IC K "
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Baines and
I daughter Mildred, of Walla Walla,
spent Sunday w ith Mrs. Shaar.
WE WELL HAVE A FEW
FIR STACKER POLES AND A
Marie. Pelmulder returned Sunday
from W alla W alla, Wash.
STOCK OF DERRICK LUMBER
IN THIS WEEK
Claude W hitsett returned home
I last week from Corvallis where he
has been attending college.
IF YOU EXPECT TO BUILD
A STACKER THIS YEAR IT
The Columbia Jersey calf club
| held a meeting at the Waugaman
home last Monday evening. This
was the second m eeting of the year
I so the club I b well on Its way for a
succesful year w ith having fourteen
members. Mr. Henry Ott is leader
and Mr. A. W. Agnew advisor. The
| club Is planning on having a judg­
ing team to compete at the local
I field day for the trip t othe Salem
THE MATERIAL NOW
MATERIALLY YOURS,
TUM-A-LUM LUMBER CO.
R. A. BROWNSON, MGR.
=tate fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Leathers and
Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Puman were hoets
I and hostesses to a dinner party at
I the Hermiston hotel Monday even­
ing. The tables were decorated In
| yellow and white. The evening
was Bpent at cards. Mr. and Mrs.
Hamm won the booby prlxe, and
I Dr. and Mrs. Prime the head prlxe.
Tom Marxen has rented the Btore
east of Parker’s on the west side and
is gettin g It In shape to move his
restaurant into it. He Is having It
kalsomlned and redecorated and w ill
be ready for business there soon.
:
T H E HERM ISTON H E R A L D
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■
■ Mrs. J. T. Hinkle has returned
■
to Portland after a few days at her
: home. She was called back to Port_
a
land by the Illness of a relative.
E. ladles met at the home of M m .
F. P, Phlppe for a birthday party
for Mrs. Heury Young. About <0
guests were present and a very ea-
Joysble day was passed. A beap-
tlful birthday cake with sixteen
candles was presented to Mrs. Young
also a gift by the ladies aid. Mrs.
Young said this was the first time
In eleven ydara that she has been
remembered with a birthday cake
and this year she has received two.
The other members of the aid are
hoping to celebrate their sixteenth
birthdays too.
O ldest Known W ill
The oldest known will, found among
the ruins of ancient Egypt nnd said to
be 4,500 years old, was so constructed
that its provisions would have to be
carried out If made today, William C.
Taylor, formerly recorder of wills, said
In a talk on “Wills,” delivered at the
luncheon of the Newcomers club In the
City club of Washington,
w it
SEE US FOR THREE STYLES
THAT EMBODY ALL UP-TO-DATE
OIL STOVE FEATURES.
Electric Washing Machines
>15 CO DOWN AND >15 00 MONTH­
LY. NO INTEREST, EQUALLING
CITY TERMS.
SAPPERS’ INC.
Æ
V ”
r
'r c À t
B r ita » * .
-T M r ■' ...eiw rg .
Yo Ve
The Stove that uses O IL
but burn* G A S
íxj Á j
o í \2K.nd
w h o lly su rro u n d e d
. B n h o t w ò t e r
3
<£S
T he Red S tar Oil S to v e is th e la te st word in oil sto v es. It
h as no w ick s or w ick su b stitu tes. T he p aten ted , in d es­
tru ctible, all-m etai burner ch a n g es k erosen e, g a so lin e or
d istilla te in to clean, fa st cook in g g a s. One gallon o f fuel
burns 19 hours.
National Forests Are
Managed W ith W isdom
At the present time the national for­
ests are harvesting about 2 per cent
of the lumber used in this country.
Yet they are producing roughly 10 per
cent of the annual effective flintier
growth. This is merely another way
of saying that on the national forests
timber is being grown more rapidly
than It Is being harvested, while in
practically all other forest areas It Is
being cut very much faster than It is
being produced, says Frank A. Waugh
I d the North American Review.
That portion of the forest timber
which Is being harvested is sold on
the stump to contractors, who cut It,
under careful regulations, and manu­
facture it into lumber and other com
modifies. Sales are made to the high
est bidders and the money received is
deposited in the United States treas­
ury. These snles now produce a rev
enue of about $2,000,000 a year.
This docs not seem a very large
amount when compared with the enor­
mous sums paid for lumber by ulti­
mate consumers, hut In this field more
than in most others the cost of man
ufacture, transportation anil selling
are many times as great as the initial
cost of production, and that even
though it may take one hundred years
to grow a tree and only a day to cut
it down. For the sake, therefore, of
Shifting this comparison to more
familiar grounds, we may say thnt the
present timber cut of the national for­
ests averages about 8OO.9'V>,O0O board
feet, worth about $20,
,u00 in Its
Anal markets.
-
th .
O
/ A
.
S ee an actual dem onotration o f -h'-
our store. W e h ave a mode! and siz e
and ev ery pocketbook.
■.
t
OREGON HDftE. & iMP,
THB ’W I N C / & S 1
Legal Blanks at The Herald Offic-
W EST END F A R M l'f ‘
Have learned that The Herald prints the
best butter wrappers. We have the large
size, 9 by 12 inches. Our prices are
100
200
300
500
DO IT N O W
We Need the Mone:
for
for
for
for
$ 1 .2 5
$ 2 .0 0
$ 2 .6 0
$ 3 .7 5
Many are buying them in the larger quan­
tities, but we are here to serve you all. If
you want only a few we have them w;- ’
out the name. These we sell as follows —
Has Y our
Subscription
E x p ired ?
12
30
62
100
for
for
for
for
10
25
50
80
cents
cents
cents
cents
“The Home of Good Printing”
i N. J. Sinnott
V oteu of the Second Congressional Dbitrict are urged to tend “Nick”
|Sinnott back to Congress because:
He is a member of he House S teerin g committee.
He Is chairman of the Public Lands committee, an Important com
nltlee to Oregon.
H i
He Is a member of the Irrigation committee, also of importance to
Oregon.
a *. )i*9"J|
i
He has done more for Eastern Oregon than any Congressman ever
ent to W ashington from th is district. Number among his accom
rlishments are: Secured $900,000 for the Baker Irrigation project, se­
ll red passage of the Mineral le a s in g act. which enlarged Oregon's re­
clamation fund: secured appropriation for construction of McKay dam,
Umatilla project; supported legislation for veterans of World war; se-
eured $7,100.000 for National Park roada, Including Crater Lake Nat-
•onal park; $150,000 to combat p in e tree beetle In Oregon: through
r orest Service Is having large body of timber surveyed In Wasco county,
which, when sold, w ill bring industries to county.
And many other important matters which are of benefit to you and
his district. Read your Voter's pamphlet and Own form ywr opinion
of Niok Sinnott.
“ Why Change Horses in the Middle
o f the Stream.” Your Congress­
man Needs Your Vote.
Paid advertisement by SINNOTT TOR CONGRESS CLUB. Ben R. Lltfln?
secretary. The Dalles, Oregon.
a
■* M
0
The Christian Science services are
held In rooms next to the Auditorium
every Sunday at I t o'clock. Sunday G r e a f Oil Shale Red
school at 10:15. All are cordially
Is Found in England
Invited to attend. Wednesday eve­
Whnt
Is
claimed to he one of the
ning m eeting first Wednesday each
greatest and richest oil-bearing shnle
month.
beds ever discovered has been found
In West Somerset, according to the
Evening Star, says a London dispatch
to the New York Times.
The bed, covering a la. e area, I:
said to have been a mining surface
S end u s t h e p r ic e o f & y e a r ’ of GOO to 790 feet, which the experts
here sny Is unprecedented. The beds,
■ubseription if y o u a r e in arrear it is declared, contain the highest qnrl
•ties of oils, compared only with the
hitherto an unparalleled example of
oil-shale wealth.
The newspaper quotes Larrette Lar­
kin, an English engineer, as report
lag that It was safe to buse the com
Come 6) an merclal production of the beds nt 9.
000,090,000 tons of oil shale with rr
renew it net oil content of more than 1,000.000,00<
time you ar tons, valued at f 3,000,000,000. He es
tlmnted the shale could be quarried
bi town
for three shillings per ton.
It also quotes Dr. W. Forbes Lcs
lie, geologist, as saying the beds wort
a source of power from which we
could draw for our Industrie s w ith
out spending money on foreign o!>
The magnitude o f tills discover., mean.-
that we can supply all our needs foi
—TRY THE HERALD WANT ADS— cheap power, light nnd heat for c.n
turies.” He claims the beds will make
England Independent of foreign sup­
plies In time of war.
R epublican C andidate for
R e-election to Congress
Oil
Stdves
S A N IT A R Y !
M.
Christian Science Services
WOULD BE WELL TO ENGAGE
COM M ERCIAL PRINTING
O F ALL KINDS
On Wednesday, April 30, the
The Methodist Episcopal Church
August Beisse erepects to leave week of Sunday, May 4. Sabbath
soon for Longview where he w ill school at 10 A. M. We are growing.
| superintend the building of a fac. Morning worship at 11. Epworth
tory In that city for a paper com- League 7 P. M. Evening worship,
8 P. M. W eekly prayer and Bible
| pany.
« l '
study class Thursday at 7:30. Regu­
Mrs. M. A. Hawn, of Porland, Is lar monthly m eeting of the official
' visiting at the home of her brother, board Wednesday evening, May 7,
at 8 o'clock. Henry Young, m inis,
Mr. R. Beasley.
ter.
Sam Rodgers received word the
first part of the week of the death
Composer of "The Rosary”
in an automobile accident of his
Ethelbert Nevln composed "The
I brother in San Jose, Cal.
Rosary.” He was born In Vlneacre,
netir Pittsburgh, Pa., In 1802. He be­
Jay Pelmulder sates that in a let- gan to attract attention when ten
I ter received from Chicago this week yenrs old by his excellent piano play­
was a report of the serious injurlen ing and when he was twelve lie was
sustained by F. W. Kuhn, a former sent to Dresden, Germany, to study.
After returning from Germany he
project readout, from being knock-
settled In Boston and became a well-
Kuhn received a fracture of one leg, known teacher and concert player, but
three broken ribs and several other In 1893 the chnrm of Europe, es­
Injuries that threaten to be raher pecially Italy, was too strong to be re­
serious. Mr. and Mrs. Kuhn owned sisted. and the next seven years were
the farm north of town now owned spent abroad, says the Detroit News.
by E. I. Davis, and left here only a The Influence of southern Europe Is
very evident In the dreamy, romantic
year or so ago.
tone of much of his later music. In
1000 he became a mnslc instructor at
An interesting program consisting Yale university and was In this work
I of musical numbers from he prim­ when stricken with heart failure. He
ary grades, the upper grades and died In 1001.
Few modern composers have ex
the high school Is to be given on S a t.
urday at 8 o’clock at the high school celled Nevln In perfection of melody,
[ building. This program is for the critics say. While “The Rosary’’ Is his
masterpiece, ‘‘Narcissus’’ has received
benefit of the school piano fund.
no smull amount of popularity. Othei
Admission 25 and 35 cents.
compositions by Nevln nre “Water
Sketches," “Day In Venice" and “ T w at
Miss H ill spent the week end in April.”
| Pendleton.
M unsing Sum m er W ear
K I N G S L E Y ’S
"You TELL’ EM
Mrs.
Shear to the owner of a
new Ford coupe.
THE HERMISTON HERALD
Legal Blanks for
Sale at This Office
YOU TELL
C m
SNAPPYBUYS
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NT
20 ACRES WELL IMPROVED, BEST
land, $750 cash, value $2250; easy
terms.
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2# ACRES. HOUSE. STABLE. FENC-
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ed. sm all tract in alfalfa, $1000.
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Tarma.
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10 ACRES. HOUSE, BARN, CLEAR- ♦
ed. ready to go: $«00.
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Hava several good tradea from ♦
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other parta of Northwest.
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E. P. GOOD
Hermiston. Oregon
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Turning down high prices will make
them feel cheap.
The high cost of living la surely
Jolted here. We are constantly of­
fering our
HIGH QUALITY MEATS
at great savings In price.
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CITY MEAT MARKET
JOHN ELUS. PROF.
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