Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1924)
tg c m a B M ig T o w n g r u m , g g M fT T o y , obbqoit . Holland C m m A iw a » Inspired by « Hored I am not, as I say, sentimental about horses; I have never yet seen a man a horse liked as well so a nice bundle of hay, writes Ouy Struthers Burt In the Saturday Evening Post. But on the Entered aa second dees m e tter, other hsnd. If you hsve ridden one December 1909 n t the poetofflce a t horse a lot and know all his Uttls ways Herm iston, Oregon. and he knows all yours, and If yon have ridden many lonely and some times dark miles with him, after a white you begin to cherish an affection For One Year _ ___ for him against your better sense. For Six Months ___ There's a sweet, warm, companion Payable In Advance. able feeling to the rippling muscles of his neck when you put your bare hand Classified or Local Advertiiing against them on a pitch-black deserted trail, almost, although not quite se 19 cents per line for first Insertion M in im u m charge 25 cents. Subac- much company as you get out of a dog In camp. And as for Joe, If you miss quent Insertions 5 cents per line. the trail In the dark arid try to turn off It he will do his best to buck with you. There's one thing about being with such short-lived things as horses and dogs that Isn't pleasant. You under 9 9 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 « stand what age Is too soon. Here Is Joe getting old—and he’s sixteen. You WHERE DANGER IS ALWAYS get too much an Impression of the 1 LURKING flight of time. A wise man should Three recent accidents on thi keep an elephant and always feel highway at the juncture where thi young. south hill road ’ntersects te high way has made th l8 place beyond th' Tim idity Has No Place question of a doubt one of the mos' Among Arabs of Deeert dangerous places on the Columbk Bravery Is the great outstanding highway. Trees along both sides of characteristic of the Arab. His Judg ment of what constitutes cowardice la the two roads obstructs the view It relentless and terrible. As aoon ae a such a manner that it is lmposslbh man Is proved a coward the tribal to see the approach of a car. and poet laureate makes a song about him yet there is no sign of any description magnifying ids fault and ridiculing to warn the traveler of the danger him. If the victim Is unmarried no There are a umber of places along women win consider him, as the song of his cowardice endures forever in the highway that is not half as dun the tribe. If he Is already m arled hie gerous as this one where sign boards wife or wives are permitted by tribal are put up as a warning to the tour. law (not hy Mohammedanism) to re 1st to be careful. But thtg In somi turn to their fathers. The men. too, manner seems to have been for cease to associate with the coward gotten. and lie becomes an outcast and a ■ pariah. To no other tribe can he turn In alll the accidents at this In tersectlon ft Is nothlg less than a for shelter, and almost invariably sui ■ cide Is his lot. miracle that someone has not beet ■ Above everything the Arab must killed or seriously injured. A sigi prove bravery In the eyes of hit wom board of some kind would lessen th< I en folk. An Arab man's arms are In g danger and if the highway commiss I variably covered with circular scare. 1 ton w ill not act the c'ty should tak< I These are relics of his childhood and I steps to alleviate Bonie of te dan I are the re: .lit of his proving his worthi- ! ger that is apparent at this cross I ness to some childhood sweetheart, his I log. It niy be the means of saving I method being to stRnd In front of the I object of his adoration and smile, the a life. while lie ullows pieces of red-hot char coal to burn him. ■ Women Surely Have Keen Sense of Money Value Watt ToAm Car. OZ C oal C onsum ers T a k e N otice W e have taken the exclusive agency for the F am ou s U ta h Aberdeen Coal. ORDERS SOLICITED Let us know your needs Inland Empire Lumber Company P h o n . 331 M . S T R A W , M G R. Exclusive Representatives of National Builders Bureau The Homing Instinct Do you know those distressing peo I f the average woman were witlioi. ple who, as soon as they start on a a sense of money values, as charge« holiday, begin to worry about coming by a budget expert, the average Ainer home? lean family would have less money li 1 met one In the train the other day. the bank thun It has. Eliminating thi She was being “seen off" by a friend, girl who lives at home and can spent and this was the burden of her con her earnings for pretty things, an' versation. whose extravagnnee Is one of tin "I 4uppose I esn't reserve my seat manifestations of her youth, It wouli' for coming home? What a bother I have been fairer to suy the nveragi But I shall send my luggage In ad housewife of America has a very keer vance. appreciation of the value of mnnei “I shall wear my blue serge costume and how hard It Is for the husband ti earn It. It Is probably quite true*that for coming home In. I hope It will be women do not budget their expenses; a tine day; I hate coming home In the rain. neither did the greet United State* *1 mustn't lose the return half of government until a few years ago. Il the budget expert would go into tin my ticket5 ami I'll ask about the time stores patmnixed hy the wives of wugi of the train for coming back as soon earners and note with what care ami as I arrive, to make sure." "Well, goodby for the present, dear. anxiety the customers rpend theli money and how anxious they are te I'm quite looking forward to coming back."—Windsor Magazine. get full value, she might revise lie Judgment ii hit. With due resiwct P the paragraphers. the women nr Savmf by Mother’s Spirit shrewd buyers. Ttie hardly saved dol One evening, a short time after my Isrs which hulk so large In saving: mother died, I was walking along a fund reports anil hnnk deposits arc lonely road near our home when a where they sre because the women of young man approached and aaked the the country hsve put them there, often way to a certain street. Aa we were against the will of their husbands both going the ssine way we walked The average man Is a much swifter along together until we came to the spender than a woman, and despite crossroads. I stopped to give him the Jokes of the paragraphers nnd further directions. Suddenly he seised comic artists, all women do not throw nte and tried to force me Into the tall away money on Innuinernlile hats and hushes which bordered the roed 1 gowns. The budget expert did lesr struggled frnntlcally, but he pulled me than Justice to her own sex when she to the ground and was dragging me criticized tlielr financial acumen.— backward. Suddenly I felt my moth Philadelphia Bulletin. er's presence beside me, although I saw nothing. Just then my assailant looked up. Without a word he dropped Javanese Houses by No me and ran down the road and out of 1 Means Things of Beauty sight as fast as he could go.—Chicago ' The day walls which surround a Journal. Balinese farm in Java are usually two or three meters high. Very often they Right and L ett Hand» rest U|»in a foundation of stones and It Is a fact not generally known that are covered with a lieavy layer of rushes which are to protect them from the lingers of the right hand move destructive tropical rains. A dm«* In much more quickly than thoae of the left. They are also much more ac the wall Is closed at night with wood curate. says London Tlt-BIts. en or bamboo planks, the Detroit Recent experiments have also proved News states. The walls around farms of "poeng that the ring Unger of the left hunil can work more quickly If It Is moving gavas" nr district mayors, nre usually built of more substantial material. In conjunction with the right-hand The same la true of the homes of forefinger. Any two Angers working Balinese princes. Yet whlla these together, Indeed, move considerably faster than oue Anger working by it latter hiaises may he elaborately dec self. orated they reseml.lt* Hie more liumhle The more n person uses his or her dwellings In that liiey are exceedingly fingers, the more adept they become. A filthy. The numerous members of the pianist or typist will And that. In time, family — parents, brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews married or umnar-1 the left hand becomes almost aa skill ri*'d—live In a single house. ! ful as the right. The pigs, dogs and goats found on I every Kslineae farm are kept In a I Uee of Canvas M odem separate hut. The loan huts are usu- I It was not until 1090 that arilats be ally ball* upon wooden elevations nnd gan to use ranvan The maatera pre are exceedingly ugly nnd ungainly. vious to that time worked In ceramics O n e a c h farm one will also And or (tainted on wood nnd walls, then on haiuboo baskets to house the fowls. canvas stretched to a frame. Many of the great painter« ground the pigments and mixed their own cot- Words W s Havs Clipped ore, says the Detroit News. A fev* years ago a tnuale hall come American supplies of art and ludue* dian made a great hit hy clipping fa miliar wonta, and we «till hear him trial paint are dependent on a large va Imitated in rolloqutal conversation, riety of foreign raw materials We Im London Tit-Rite says. People say “Ini port Windsor and Newton, and atlll In poes" for Imiioaslhle, "hlx" for bual- the opinion of arilata do aot make colors that give the appearance of ageu nesa anti " («sir for passion. But such cllp|ie<l Winds sre not des tined Io appear In any dictionary, and we must go back much farther in the Herald Want Adt Bring Yon Resulti history of words to And that when we say: “ H e led the van." we mean the “vanguard"; when we speak of a imlr of van horses, we mean “cervnn"; when we retire to the "drawing naan." we ought to nay the with drawing room ; w hen we talk of a "hohhy" we Send us the price o f refer to riding a "hobby horse"; when we talk of *|Mirt we mean “dl*|>ort," subneriptior if you ate i of “tending" we mean "attending," or a "cute" lawyer we mean acute, and 9f 9 “still" we wean a distiller/, i 'Rancher, too, prefers ZEROLENE Not just because it is an economically priced oil, but because it lubricates b e tte r every type of farm equipment, from a tractor to an auto mobile. Big users, who can afford to test out the merits of different oils experimentally, refuse to pay tribute to the superstition that “eastern” oils are in sone mysterious way "better” — why should you? The Natomas Company of California, which operates 10 automobiles, 3 five-ton trucks, 9 Ford trucks, 3 Best Tracklayer Caterpillars, 1 Holt Caterpillar, and 2 stationary gas engines, and also uses Zerolene on the bearings of 9 irrigation pumps, writes as follows: W e have used your products for several years with exceptionally good results, and your prompt service has been valuable to ZEROLENE jor FORDS —the Standard O il C o m p an y '« new im p ro ved e il for Ford cere “ Feedi Those Oil-Starved The use of Zerolene will not only cut down your oil bill, but enable you to secure greater gasoline mileage, with less carbon, lower upkeep costs, and a longer work ing life for all your power equip ment. In s is t on Z e ro le n e — a b e tte r o il — e ve n i f i t does cost less. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (C A L IF O R N IA ) ZEROLENE L J DO IT NOW W t Need the Money! job in our line give There are lace curtains In the win Shaw and Florence E. Attebury, W. dows of many Dutch cowsheds. And H. Quick. Mabel M. Richards, Aug-’ the floors are laid with shining white J ust A. Paulsen, F. R. Dorn. Thomai tiles, kept spotlessly clean. I Richard, Tillamook Alfalfa Land Last her tall should drag In the dirt, I I Co., George L. Wurster, and Lee the Dutch cow has It held up by a ¡1 Savely, holders of title or evidence neat chain from the roof. Her horns |! c f title to land adjacent to the bound, are scrubbed and polished. She Is j a r l e s of the West Land Irrigation carefully groomed, eays a writer in the London Mali. I District, or within the boundaries of As she spends eight months of the I said district but excluded therefrom, year Indoors, perhaps these comforts I In the order creating sa d District, are necessary. To lighten the darkness ¡'w ere filed with the Directors of said of winter the cowshed Is provided with ! District; praying that the lands of electric ligh t There la also some kind j I raid petitioner,, he 'ncluded In the of heating system. The Dutch spring la generally very I West Land Irrigation D istrict. The cold and windy. Therefore, when the II names of petitioners and description lucky Dutch cow Is turned out to grass I of lands mentioned n said petitions In May she la well wrapped up. The . J are ag follows: pampered animal must not catch cold. |j Henry J. B ean:— That part of Everything, from the shining milk l;Sec. 13, Tp. 3. N. R. 28 E. W. M. palls to the beautifully carved milking I described as follows: Commencing stools, is as clean as It is humsnly II on the Northerly line of the rig h t-, possible to make It There Is a farm In Holland where I of-w ay of the Western Irrigation pigs are kept—and where each pig has j Company's ditch where the same In- a sort of little bathroom attached to Its IterBects thg-W est line of the public sty. li road, on the Fast of Sec. 13. Tp. 3 | J N. p, 28 E. W. M., th' nee running Candles Play Big Part I W esterly along the Northerly l'ne in Chinese Ceremony | of said right-of-way about 1 mile to where the same intersects the ’ While both domestic-made and Im West line of said Sec. 13; thence ported candles are extensively sold In North on the said West line of said China, their uses by the Chinese are distinct The Imported candle Is pro* Sec. 13. 150 rods; thence Easterly (erred for Illumination and It la al in a direct line to a point on ahe most exclusively used for this pur | center or half sect on line of said pose. Sec. 13, 30 rods North of the North The Chinese-made product, unlike the erly line of said ditch right-of-way; foreign candle, which la usually white, thence easterly on a direct line to a cornea In a variety of shapes, sizes and point on the West line of said road colors, red being the most general, 30 rods North of the Northerly line says the Detroit News. The red candle Is used for ceremonial purposes, at of said ditch r ght-of-w ay; thence weddings and at other gala events. i South 30 rods to the place of begin In recent years foreign candles n in g , containing 120 acres more or I stained red have been Imported to aid ' less. Also all that part of the NW In Oiling the demand at what Is per *4 of the NW >4 of said Sec. 13 ' haps the world’s greatest candle-burn which Is north of and under the ing event, the Chinese New Year. lateral ditch now constructed there I Those of plain white take their place In funeral ceremonies at the death of on. containing 30 acres more or less. elderly persons and those of light blue P. Sher dan:— All that part of the ' or green are to be seen at funeral serv West H of the N E tf of Sec. 33, j ices held for younger persons. Tp. 4, N. R. 28, E7. W. M. lying ' At weddings candles decorated with wax flowers are used, as well as others South of the Umatilla River. E. Snyder:— That part of the W made Into figures of the dragon and of the NW*4 (lota 1 and 2) o f ! the phoenix propitious sighs for a newly married couple. In these the Sec. 18, Tp. 3 N. It. 29, E. W. M., wick Is made of reeds-or grass. lying north of the Western Land * Irrigation Co. canal as the same is F o rc e d to B eg O ff constructed across said premises. An indefatigable traveler, arriving Carl H. Shaw:— Two acres in the In New York, did not go to the palatial Northwest corner and the South 14 caravansary he usually patronized hut acrea of that part of the NE'/, of put up In an obscure hotel on a side 'he SW U of Sec. 31. Tp. 4, N. R. street. But the very next day he 38, E. W. M„ descc bed in deed re bumped Into the manager of the down- corded in Book 100 "age 554, Deed to-the-mlnute hostelry where he bad always stopped and where he was Records of Umatilla County, Oregon- known so well. Geitrude F. Shaw nd Florence E. “Why. Mr. Blnnk,” was the shocked Attebury:— The N»,j of the SE% greeting, “In New York and not stop "ec. 33, Tp. 4 North Range 28, E. ping with us?” “It’s this way, old fellow,” explained Klank contritely. “I’m too tired this trip to live up to the unparalleled service you give." I I When you have it to the home prin ter. The salesman own t o ice give you «n oily line of * bu k ’ but the home printer is entitled to oui oh work. ’ do lar away io “ Tbe Yard of Best Quality ” H. Oow« m Holland are treated w ttk as much consideration as human beluga. I n rst day of August, 1924, the pet - They have the beat of food. T heir I tlong of H. J. Bean, P. Sheridan, E. sheds sre furnished. They even h are ■ Snyder, Carl H. Shaw, Cert rude E. overcoats when they so out. Subscribe for The Herald~$2.00 HERMI31 ON utes East 1005 feet; thcncy East 477 feet: thence noitii 2244 feet; thence West 1327 feet; thence South 1749 feet to the point of b egin n n g, except the North 20 acres thereof. Mabie M. Richards:— The W H c f I the N EK of Sec. 32 Tp. 4, N. R , 28, E. W. M. August A Paulsen:— The NW>4 ¡ of the SW% of Sec. 33 Tp. 4, N. R 28, E. W. M. F. R. Dorn:— The E H bf the NE U and SW U of th e N E '4 of Seo. 14, Tp. 3, N. R. 28, E. W. M. Thomas Richards:— The E% of the N E U of Sec. 32 Tp. 4, N. It. | 28. E. W. M., being 78 acres trrlir- aple, and the N W U of the N W >4 and the N H of the SW '4 of C o N W U of Sec. 33 Tp. 4 N. R. 28 E. . W. M., 60 acres. 57 acres irritable. ! Tillamook Alfalfa Land Company: — The S E U and the E H of the SW "4 of Sec. 32. Tp. 4 N. R 28. E. W. M., co n tain in g 240 acre.! mo¡e i or less, except the r ght-of-w ay for : the main canalof the Western Land A Irrigation Co., as now conatrnct- ' ed along the South boundary of sold j land and across the Southwest cor- ! ner of said of the SW14 of s a il Sec. 32. George W urster:— The NWÍ4 of 'th e NE>4 and the NE<4 of theNW ■4 of Sec. 8. Tp. 3 N. R. 28, E. W. M.. 5 acres of each 40 being lrrig- I able. Lee Savely:— The W H of the SE '4 and the SWI4 of Sec. 5. and all that part of the E H of the SE14 j of Sec. 6, lying East of the Western Lend & Irrigation Company canal j as constructed across sa d See. 6, all In Tp. 3, N. R. 28, E. W. M., 260 acre,, being Irrigable. , All pcisons Interested In the mat ter of r'.'d petitions or who may be intere ted or affected by such change in the boundaries of s a d Dts- | trtet, are hereby notified to appear at the office of the Board of Direc- I tors of the Westland Irrlgaton Dis trict at Hermiston, Oregon, on the Second day of September, 1924, at 19:00 o'clock A. M., being the next regular meet ng of the Board after the expiration of the tim e of pub lication of this notice, then and there to show cause. If any they have, why said petition ahould not be granted. Dated this 5th day of August. 1924. J. W . M E S 8 N E R . Secretary of the Board of P rectors of W estland Irrigation District. ( 4 l-4 tc ) EE a LU SHOE REPAIRING A SPECIALTY —AT— HAHN’S SHOE STORE WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF I~EW SHOES AS WELL AS ARMY SHOES AND ARMY BTAEKETS. WEST END FARMERS Have learned th at The Herald prints the best butter wrappers. We have the large size, 9 by 12 inches. Our prices are— 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 with out the name. These we sell as follows—