Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1924)
I THE HZBMISTOX BXBJLLD, HERMISTON, OREGON. Bip Brrattabn WrralU Published every Thursday a t H er- m istan. U m a tilla Com ity, Oregon by Kaymood Crowder, E d ito r an Bhtered aa second class m atter, December 1906 a t the poetofflce a t Herm iston, Oregon. Subscription Bates F o r One T i e r ------------------ 99.00 F o r Six M onths _____________ 91.00 Payable In Advance. Classified or Local Advertising 10 cents per line for firs t Insertion. M in im u m charge 25 cent«. Subse quent Insertions 5 cent! per line. E arly U n ite d State» O fficial G iven H onor T he 1922 series of 910 gold certlfl- eatee bears the likeness of Michael HU- legas, the first treasurer of the United States. The germ of the Treasury de partment was planted on July 2». 1775, when the Continental congress appoint ed two treasurers. The appointments were Hlllegas and George Cl.vmer. The' la tte r soon resigned to accept his seat as delegate to the congress. Hlllegas discharged the duties of treasurer un Ol September 1, 1789. The Treasury department was or ganised under an act of September 2, 1789. Strictly speaking, It was reor ganized. for the department, under various names, had been In existence since 1775. The Constitution went In to effect March 4, 1789, Washington was Inaugurated as the first President o f the United Slates April 30. 1789. It w ill thus be seen that Hlllegas was treasurer many months a fter the In auguration of Washington, and for nine days after the Treasury depart ment was organized under the Consti tution. Festival of St. Peter On the eve of St. Peter's day bon fires were commonly prepare«] and Ig nited throughout Great Britain. This festival was most fervently kept up a t Eton during the Middle ages, where the boys made their bonfires against the church. In London the day was also associated with bonfires In the streets and with the setting of a Watch at night, the Watch parad ing with torches, and sometimes num bering fully 2,000 citizens. History records how King H al, disguised In a guardsman's coat, went privately Into Cheape to witness the pngennt. York shire fishermen remembered St. Peter on his day by holding festival, dress ing their boats and painting their masts, and sprinkling the prows with good liquor for good luck. Jimson W eed Valuable Both the lenves and seeds of the Jimson have medicinal properties. The leaves are collected at the time of flowering, and the entire plant Is cut or pulled up and the leaves stripped and dried In the shade. The leaves are poisonous, cnuslng dilation of the pupil of the eye, and are used princi pally In sstlimn. For the collection of the seeds, the capsules should he taken from the plants when they are quite ripe, hut still o f a green color. The capsules should then be dried for a few days, when they will hnrsf open and the seeds can be readily shaken out. These should then be carefully dried. Intelligent Reading I f the hooks which you reHd are your own, mark with a pen or pencil the most considerable things In them which you most desire to remember. Then you may read that book the sec ond time over with half the trouble, by your eye running over the para graphs which your pencils has noted. It Is but a very weak objection against this practice to say "I shall spoil my book"; for I persuude myself that you did not buy It as a bookseller, to sell It again for gain, but as a scholar, to Improve your mind by It; and If the mind he Improved, your advantage Is abundant, though your book yields less money to your executors. When Pillory Was Used The use of the pillory for the pun ishment of evil doers was only abol ished In England during comparative ly recent times, nnd was In active op eration in June, 1837. This peculiar form of punishment has a venerable history, and was known before the Conquest, in the form of an Instru ment of torture called the stretch- neck. The pillory was usually dedi cated to fraudulent dealers, sellers of shnm gold rings, or counterfeiters of papal bulls, until Star chamber tyrants made It a poJticnl weapon, whereby many a noble heart was tried and tempered. Scriptural Translaticns Every year scholars nre tolling to translete the Scripture» Int» more and still more dialects. Thousands are plodding all over the globe to put these translations In the bunds o f all peo ples. In the Interiors of distant coun tries. fnr up the Amazon valley per haps, or Into darkest Africa, where the Bible has never been, colporteurs are trnmplng with their packs. Motor cars are carrying the Bible across the desert from Damascus to Bagdad In 48 hours, a Journey that was once a m atter of six weeks, snd by fastest camel jiost a trip of nine days. SJonuments to Apples Monuments nr markers have been erected to n few uf the most noted varieties of apple. In 1895 a monu ment was built to the Baldwin at Wilmington, near Lowell. Mass.. The first In New York was erected In the town of Camillus, Onondaga county, on the original site of the Primate ap ple trees of John T. Roberts of Syrs ruse. In 1903. There followed one to the Northern Spy In 1012. and the McIntosh Red In the same year. A monument to the Wealthy was ed at Excelsior, Minn., in 11112. HI THE CIRCUIT COURT 0 1 THE the first publication thereof is mads pursuant to said order on the 21rd STATE 0 7 OREOOH 1 0 » day of Oetohsr, 1994. UMATILLA C0UMTT W estern Irrig a tio n Company, a Raley, R aley ft S telw er, nnd H . J. W a rn e r, A ttorneys for P la in tiff. corporation, p la in tiff, vn. W. 99. F irs t N a tio n a l B ank of Herm is ton, P la in tiff, vs. C. J. F ly n n . De fendant. Fummons. L aw No. 9081. To C. J. F ly n n , the above named defendant: In the Name o f the State of Oregon you are hereby required to appear and answer the com plaint In the above e n title d m a tte r w ith in six w eek, from the firs t publication of thia summons, and you w ill take n o- Ice th a t I f you fa il to appear o r ans wer or plead w ith in th a t tim e , the p ls ln tirr for w an t thereof w ill apply to the above e n title d court for the re lie f prayed for In Its com plaint herein, to -w lt: fo r Judgment and de cree against the defendant fo r the sum of 9286.12 together w ith in te r est thereon a t the ra te of 10 per rent per annum from the 12 day of September 1924 and the fu rth e r sum nr 99.91 w ith Interest thereon a t the rate of 6 per cent per annum from the 12th day of September 1914 and ’ or the fu rth e r sum of 950.00 at torney's fees and for p la in tif fs costs and disbursements of this action. And you w ill fu rth e r tak e notice th a t the p la in tiff has heretofore caused to be attached under w r it of attachm ent Issued In the above e n title d court the follo w in g described real property to -w lt: T he weet h a lf o f the Southwest q u a rte r o f the Southeast q u a r ter of Section 15. T w p . 4 N o rth . Range 29. E . W . M „ located In U m a tilla county, Oregon, and th a t p la in tiff wlU apply to the above e n title d court for an order d irectin g the sale o f said property In satisfaction of p la in tiff's Judg ment herein. T his summons Is published to the order of Ih e Hon. G ilb e rt W . Phelps. Judge o f the above e n title d court, duly made and entered on th e 14th ' day of October, 1924. d irectin g th a t publication herein be made ones a week for a period o f a l l consecutive w eek, In the Herm iston H e ra ld , and | W h en you have a “AM dis Mlsto Gibbs, do lawyer what bandies divo'ce cases?" Inquired a buxom-looking colored woman, open ing the door of an attorney’s offlee. “I handle some divorce cases," ad mitted the lawyer. “Do yon want oneF "Ab snttlnly does. Mah name am Mrs. Mandy Purdin, an Ah wants te sot mabse’f abet of dat good-fo'notb In* bosban* o' mine, Lysander Purdin." “On wbat grounds F I "Groan's? Says which, groun's? Why, right heah In Houston.” “ What Is your complaint against him? Wbst hag he doneF “Complaints. Mlsto Gibbs, la some thin' Ah ain't got nothin* aloe but. An' dat low-life be'a done ever'tbln'. But de latea’ la dat be'a up an' gone an' went an' Insured his Ufa fo* five ' thousand dollars I K in yo* Imagine d a tF “But my good woman, bis Insuring himself Is no grounds for complaint." “ T s ln ’t, huh? Looky here, sub.; D at man done tuk ont all dat Insur ance when he ain't got no Idea a-tall o' dying. He done It Jea’ to tant’lize | m e! Yassuh. Jea’ to tant’llxe m el"— Cravens, Dargan Company Review. Poetofflce address, Pendleton, Oregon Bugg. Defendant. T -7 U Summmons. E q u ity No, >911. To W . W . Bugg, the above named N a v a jo B rave Flee» defendant. From M oth er-in -L aw In the Name of the State s f Ore ' The superstitions of the Navajns gon, you are hereby required to ap are so many and so varied that life pear and answer the com plaint In for them would be a constant burden the above e n title d suit w ith in six ■ If they observed them as carefully as weeks from the firs t publication of they are supposed to. It Is probable this summons and you w lU take not > that the great American mother-ln-luw ice th a t If you fa il to appear and myth, which represents all mothers- answer or plead w ith in th a t tim e in-law as being very bad medicine, the p la in tiff, fo r w an t thereof, w ill had Its origin In the beliefs of the Ngvajos; for very terrible things are apply to the above e n title d Court supposed to happen to soy Navajo for the re lie f prayed for In Its oom- man who Is so unfortunate as to meet p la ln t herein, to -w it: i bis mother-in-law fuce to face, writes F o r Judgment and decree la favor Kenneth L. Roberts, In the Saturday of the p la in tiff and against the de ’ Evening PoeL When the Navajoa are pressed to fendant W . W . Bugg for the sum o f 915.00 w ith Interest thsrson a t 9 per reveal the hideous calamities that cent per annum from June 1, 1910 would befall them In the event of meeting their mother-ln-lsw, they u n til paid and the fu rth e r sum o f move uneasily from foot to foot and 915.00 w ith Interest thereon a t atx evade the Isaac. It Is horrible to talk per cent per annum from June le t. about, but It Is obvious that meeting 1921, u n til paid and the fu rth e r aum a mother-in-law In Navajo circles 1» of 915.00 w ith Interest thereon at the very apex of tough luck. A Navajo will go to any length to six per cent from June 1. 1911 un i E ffective M a yb e, bu t ' avoid burying a dead man. It Is very til paid and the fu rth e r aum o f bad medicine to kill or skin a bear. P rice “D on e Tuk ’Em" 915.00 w ith Interest thereon a t six 1 His superstition, however, has never Gen. Sterling Price of Missouri was per cent per annum from Juna le t, led him to consider as bad medicine 1923 u n til paid and the fu rth q r aum 1 the stealing o f fascinating little odds one of the best fighters In the Confed of 916.00 w ith Interest thereon a t and ends from the white man any erate army, but he was a scholar In Inverse radio. Complex tactical move six per cent per annum fro m Jana more than the white man In years gone by considered that he wus doing ments In practice did not stagger him, 1st, 1924 u n til paid, and sny particular wrong when he sold but tradition has It that the simplest F o r a fu rth e r deersa th a t the said Nsvajo women snd children Into problem on paper was beyond i l » sums are a firs t and p rio r lien upon slavery, stole Navajo land and killed power. During the early days of the Civil the follow in g described tra c t of land Navajo aheep. w ar he visited General Beauregard, In U m a tilla County, Oregon, to -w lt: who was a graduate of West Point, sn Commencing a t a point <60 feet expert mathematician, a civil engineer W o r ld E n rich ed b y East o f the Northw est Cornet an authority on m ilitary tactics G enius in P o v e rty and c f Section 16, Tow nship 4 N o rth . and strategy. Range 26, B. W . M. thense Bast Art? What have “Idle riches" done A t Corinth, Miss., Beauregard had for that? By rights they should have opportunity to put his theory Into 330 feet; thencs South 1920 produced, they should have created, practice, and had placed about the feet; thencs West 990 fset; hut so fa r as output goes their con city what he termed “a series of im thence N o rth 1920 feet to the tribution has been disappointing. One pregnable fortifications." He took point of beginning, often bears tbs suggestion made that General Price In his carriage to view under and by v irtu e of th a t certain young people of artistic promise these fortifications, carefully explain contract and agreement entered In should be "endowed” to create. " If ing their merits. Then he asked Price what he thought of the system. to by the defendant W. W. Bugg only he bad a little more money, and Price straightened himself np and w ith the W estern Land and Ir r ig a leisure— what great things he would tion Company on the 10th day o f do I” Would he? I believe, sordid as said thoughtfully: “Well, haln’t never It may seem, that the wolf at the door seen one like 'er but onct before." A p ril, 1916 and w hich la Recorded “They were pretty effective, weren't has often been one of the most power In Book 96 at page 467 of the Rec ful Incentives toward artistic creation. th e y F ords of Deeds of U m a tilla County, "Yep, fine. I done tuk ’er."— Kan O f course there are volcanic gifts O reron, snd like those of Shelley or Blake that sas City Times. F o r a fu rth e r decree of this Court erupt spontaneously and Irresistibly, herein foreclosing the said llsn and regardless o f the consequences. But Put Her Foot in It d irectin g th a t the real property In many of the greatest artists have been I went to a small town to teach goudsd on to creation by need. Shake said contract i.nd hereinabove des school, and found that every one speare, Cbatterton, and (coming a long cribed be aold In the m anner pro way a fter these) W a lter Scott, Doctor seemed to be related to every one else. vided by law for the sale o f real pro Johnson, Anthony Trollope, On the T hat cut me off from all chance for friendly gossip, for one conld never perty under lien foreclosure under whole, great artists have been not only tell when she would be gossiping In execution to be Issued upon such de hard workers, but men who have had front of some adoring annt or cousin. cree; th a t the proceeds o f said sale to work hard.— Violet Bonham-Carter I was explaining this, laughingly, lo In Good Housekeeping. shall be applied as by la w provided. a girl In the town who had been nice And fo r a fu rth e r decree fo r such to me. M ystery of Seund Board She remarked, “Tea, that la so, bnt other and general re lie f as to equity The sound board o f a piano, al 1 sm one exception— we have no rela shall seem meet and proper In the though It Is actually a thin aheet of tives here outside our Immediate fam premises. fir wood, la a wonder not fully under ily— you may gossip to me about any This summons Is published pursu stood In Ita effects. Moat people know one." ant to the order of the Hon. G ilbert that every note haa a complete and "W ell, the people I want moat to W . Phelps, Judge of the abovs e n tit very elaborate set of vibrations which gossip abont are some newlyweds— don't know their name, bnt she calls led Court, duly made and entered on give It Its pitch and character, and all these separate sets are reproduced In him 'darling Donnie dear,' and they the seventh day of October, 1924, d i the sound board quite Independently. are too silly to be around sane peo recting th a t publication herein he Bven In comparatively simple music ple." mado once a week for a period of six there are frequently thousands of vi “Oh.” replied my friend. " I had for consecutive weeks In the Herm iston brations going on In that piece of thin gotten about my brother Don and his Herald, a newspaper published in brittle wood, which we can hear but wife— they've been married about a month, but we don’t think they are T cim lsto n, U m a tilla County, Oregon, cannot see; and with all the crossing Sillier than anybody else.”— Rehoboth nd the firs t publication herein Is snd recrnsslng of the vibration lines which must take place there Is never Sunday Herald. na^e pursuant to said order on the any confusion, and It Is possible to se 23rd day of October, 1994. lect any group of vibrations as the Ra'cy, Raley ft S tslw er ft H . J. W a r one to which we can pay the most at Come In anc ner, A ttorneys for P la in tiff. tention, Perhaps even still more won renew It next Po it-o fflee Address: Pendleton, Ore derful la the fact that the piano maker gon. 7-Tte cm make the board susceptible to dif time you an ferent kinds of vibration without knowing how he does IL In town. TN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREOOH FOR UMATILIA COUNTY ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■REE Mandy H ad H ad Enough a t "T anfllaintM Hatband H as Y our Subscription E x p ire d ? Coal Consumers T ake N otice W e h ave taken t h e exclu sive agen cy for the F a m o u s U t a h A b erd een Coal. Let us know your n eed s “ The Yard of Best Quality ” Exclusive Representatives of National Builders Bureau VOTE 3C6 YES— And save the Dairy Industry. Legal Blanks for Sale at This Office tow n concern *y a give you S line of ‘ b ’ the ho ne a to y u. 3 turn id are st . is to be p i C« • 1 i Is b roadcasting to a ll the World th is season “ C om e! W eanIwttiranparw th a n e v e r to e n te rta in y o u e n d — v - y o u r v is it a w o n d e r fu l i IF you h a v e never been to California it should be the eflort o f your life to go. W hen you are ready to plan the trip let the a J a a S o n Pacific help. Send word to the undersigned by phone, or m ail or ta il. I w il: Rive you the benefit o f m y personal knowledge -xpcneac i, or I w i l l BMMl r e a tfce m e e t b c lp fw l pv nte.S T lu U ftr to b s h ftd . I know every route, every train, every kind o f equipm ent and the exact cost. I will secure yovrsleeping car accommodations, provide vou with an outline o f your trip , and deliver your Vckets. Y o u need net ! -2ve your home or your office to attend to bothersome d tails. I have the beat there is, and i t shall be yours the m en u n t I know you desire it. F. C. W o ug hter, Agent, Herm iston, Oregon iB E B E iiB a B B a a B a a o c s i sure T o See Us liiis im s iia iB o iiiM Suni well have it in a minute W ith Pearl O il in' a iB iiiiis is a a ia iiis s SATURDAY, SUNDAY, M O NDA Y M O V E M B E R 15. 16, 17 good oil heater—you can warm up any room in the house in a jiffy. Abso lutely no odor, though you use it every hour o f the day — because Pearl O il is entirely consumed by the flame. In even the best oil heaters— you should use only the highest-quality ker osene. Avoid asking for ’’kerosene” or ’’coal ofl” which may mean any kind o f kerosene. Order "Pearl O il” by the name that’s copyrighted for your pro. tedion. S T A N D A R D O IL C O M P A N Y (Celifonue) The Most Talked of Picture Today BEAM (K n U M R N B ) Fair Offer A flashily dressed youth was bus ting around the foreman o f a con struction gang In h»|>es of picking up a soft Job aa timekeeper. " I have nothing like that left." said the husky foreman. “ Yon say yon need work. I f you need work, why don't you try hodcarrylng?" “I ain't strong enough to carry one o f them hods.” "Now, look here, lad. I'll make yon a fa ir offer. I f yoo'll really go to work I'll rail four bricks a load.”— Ixtulo- vllle Courier-Journal. out of H . M. S T R A W . M G R. T H E H ERM ISTO N H E R A L D PLAYHOUSE an ■ dollar you tend away is ¿>e fot> Inland Empire Lumber Company ever. Ou r i nc Phone 331 Carly Polo Games It la a long vlata back to the his toric d ty when. In 1871, two cavalry teams played the first polo game on English soil with a billiard ball snd hockey sticks; to Prospect park, Brooklyn, when the elder Bennett and Foxhall Keene staged the Drat game on American soil in 1876. Yet these two events have made polo truly In ternational. The tactics of those early players of the eighties have been pro foundly modified until the game has now become a science. In which the pony has gradually come to share the honors with hla rider. 8 ter. T h e salesm an O RDERS SOLICITED T o Y o u r O r d e r and a t R e a s o n a b le P ric e s s o se e s e s e e e s e e e e s o e e e e e e e o it to th e hom e prin- from HONEY LABELS in in our line give a I Rare Motorist A Melbourne dtlaen was run down by a motor car the other day while perambulating homewards on a “push- bike." The car was on Its wrong side, and the “bike” was broken serosa; Its rider had a brace o f ribs fractured and a damaged occiput combined with cuts on the face snd many abrnalons. The tout for a firm of shypoo solici tors called upon the Injured man and tried to persuade him to take action against the car owner for substantial damages. "Oh, I couldn't do that," said the hurt dtlaen. “But you can.” perlsted the tout, “and you would be absolutely sure to recover," “ No. I cannot.” pursued the victim. “You do not know the whole circumstances. The driver has apologised.“— Sydney (Australia) Bulletin. I 1 jo b D oors O pen 7:15 A dm ission S how s Starts 7:30 and 9:3 0 2 5 -50c «The C overed w agon * (Artsy -ft N. B.—Oar contract with Famous Players Lasky stipulates that an id mission of 25 cents must he charged for children between the ages of 8 and 12. Everyone over 12 years musi poy adult i ‘ " of 50 cents.