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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (March 17, 1927)
THE HZBMISTOIT HEBJLLD, TTBTRMlSTOffr OBBQOX. Qtyeirrmtatoro ^ rralli Sevenfold Misfortune Unable to Put Trust in Alligator’s Memory The adage that “ralafortunea never Published every Thursday at Her eome singly" seems to be llluatrnted Charles Uluglii.g, of cltcus fame, miston, Umatilla County, Oregon by by a dialogue which was overheard I d who died at Sarasota, used to collect a Jersey City trolley car: Joseph 8. Harvey, editor and man- “You don’t tell me that Profeasor anecdotes of Florida crackers, poor whites and colored folk. »«wr. ______ (stoics has been struck dumb?" “One of Mr. Itlngliug's anecdotes," •‘He has." Entered as second class matter “And wasn’t he master of seven lan said a Sarasota realtor, the other day, “was about a cautious convert. December, 190«, at the postofftce at guages r “There bad been, you see, u col Hermiston, Umatilla County, Oregon. “He was." "And Is It possible he was strneb ored revival, and the colored revival dumb In all seven? How extraordi ist waa about (o baptize a batch of Subscription Bates converts In one of those dark, silent, One Year ............................- ....... $2.Od nary !" susptclous-lookJug streams that you Six M onths............................. —- >1-00 Introducing Mr. Gush, uud In our Everglades. “ ‘Cotue,’ the revivalist said, as he the Great Salesman stepped into the black water. ‘Come, BE THEBE I’d like to have you meet Mr. Gush. follow me. bredderu uud sistern.’ Mr. Gusli is a salesman. "But Just then u couple of alli Next Thursday, March 24, when H. At any rate, that Is what Mr. Gush E. Cosby, poultry specialist of the tells people and that Is what he gators raised their heads from the mud and opened their terrible mouths state college, Is on the project for a wrote at the top of Ills Income-tax re in a vast yawn. This caused the con meeting of poultry growers and turn. verts to step back with low cries of I Just know that Mrs. Gush thinks alarm. those Interested In the industry which 1« so rapidly taking a place her husband Is a big business man. "The revivalist rebuked them. ’Bred- in the front rank of local activities, She’s heard him confess as much so dern uud sistern, he said, ‘cun t yo' many times. trust de Lord? He look keer o’ Jonah, he should be gretted by a crowd of Mr. Gush has a fine address. As he didn’t lie?* real size. says, so ninny salesmen aren’t good “ ‘Yuus, he did, pawson,’ said a con The growers, or at least a large talkers. He might easily have gone share of them, stand to get some in in for after-dinner speaking. He has vert soberly, ‘but a wbule’s different. A whale's got memory. But If one o’ formation from the specialist that Just tiiat effect on you. dent 'gators was ler swuller dis coon will mean money in their pockets. No one can ever say that Mr. Gush he'd jes' go to sleep ag’ln in de mud That is good enough reason for refused the gauntlet. He Is always un’ fergel ull about it.’ " them to attend, and they undoubtedly ready to do battle with the biggest customer In his territory. "They can’l will be there. Others in the community whose bluff me and the bigger they nre. the Big Discovery Made Interest In poultry Is Indirect have harder they fall," he so originally puts With Crude Telescope Just as vital reasons for being pres It. One of the capital discoveries of Mr. Gush has found It difficult to ent. The chief one Is that poultry get an attractive arrangement; you astronomy wus mude with a crude production on this project has grown know what the rest of us call a good telescope In April, 1846. It wns the until It is a matter of prime Interest Job. Speaking before the Happy Hour discovery of. spiral nebulae, by Lord to the community as a whole, and club the other day. he announced, “The Kosse, an English peer. His lurge tele men and women In all walks of life grentest trouble I have Is In letting scope wus erected In a country dis trict of Ireland more than eighty years owe it to the community and to my boss keep up with me." • A willful group of men have petl ago, for the most part with local la their own selfish interests to be there to acquaint themselves with tinned for an open season on Just such bor, and it lucked all the advantages that modern mnchlne tools now afford. what is being done and how it’s babies as Mr. Gush. “Just Jealous,” says Mr. Gush, drop Its long tube, supported upon a ball- done. ping his dime Into the pocket with and-socket joint, and slung In chains the other one where It can ntuke more between two high walls of masonry, Hermiston regrets the misfortune noise.—Boston Globe. peered through the Irish mists. Lord Kosse could observe objects only that has overtaken her neighboring when near the merldlnn and then at town In the situation arising as a the cost of constant effmrt. In modern reeult of the closing of the Bank ol Proud Metropolis Got the apparent westward 3tanfield. Such an event causes ln- Title From Royalty Instruments motion of the stars Is counteracted by :onvenlence, a probable loss, and up , The Infant settlement of New Am the steady motion of the telescope sets the orderly processes of business. sterdam was still In Its swaddling tube, turned slowly about a polar axis Sometimes apparent hard knocks! clothes when across the~sea, In the by a powerful driving-clock. Lord prove to be doses of medicine that j palace of the English king. Baby Stu Kosse, after the tube had been worked work to the improvement of the art posed to Anthony Van Dyke for back and forth with a windlass until the prim little portrait that has be sufferer. Here’s hoping that Stan , the tedious tack of finding a celestial come so widely known and beloved. field emerges from this present sit The "Stuart Baby,” second son of object hud been completed, tlien had uation with a minimum of loss and Charles I of England and Henrietta to keep It In the field of view hy con stant recourse to similar primitive every benefit possible. Maria, had no thought then that the contrivances.—George Ellery Hale, In struggling vllluge. one day to he the Scribner’s Mugazlne. Does community advertising pay? pride of the Western world—would years later be named in his houor, Hermiston has done all too little, but Attire Hard to Adjust its place a« the coming poultry dis New York. This child, who In h's turn succeed The original dress of the Scottish trict of eastern Oregon is being not j ed to the English throne as James II. iced by more and more people. Sonic j was nt nine years old, created duke highlander «vas the Celtic felle-bren- day we will forget our modesty anc J of York and Albany. Upon reaching cun, or belted plaid, this being a piece tell the world in louder tones than j manhood he precipitated himself Into of tnnan cloth two yards brond and four long, drawn around the waist In whispers Just how good a proposition : various wars, all of which he came carefully adjusted folds, and firmly this climate and soil Is for the poul through with a reputation for brilliant buckled with a belt. Like the modern personal courage. try man. kilt, the lower part reached the knees In 1064 Charles granted New Neth while the upper wns fixed to the shoul erlands to the duke of York, and nn New Books in The County Library English force under Col. IMchard Nlc- der In u manner to permit perfect freedom of the right arm. In wet Bost Plays of 1925-26. This pop olls took possession of the city, nam weather the plaid or upper part of |»lar collection of the best-likeo ing It New York In Ills honor. Subse cloth served as a covering for the Moys of the last season In New York quently the Dutch recaptured tire shoulders. It required considerable iontains "Young Woodley," “Tht province, hut the English quickly took dexterity for a Highlander to attire Jybbuk,” and others much , de It away from them again, restoring himself In'n belted plaid. The method the name of the Stourt prince.—Men usuully employed was to lay It on the tiand. ' tor Mugazlne. floor and. after the folds had been Newton, A. E. Doctor Johnson carefully arranged, to lie down upon » play. It nnd buckle It on.—Vancouver Prov Good Answer Pour scenes from the life of Sam A business man who had been Irri ince. uel Johnso t put Into dramatic form by a well kuown collector of John- tated beyond measure hy soilellnrs for Birth of the Ego' sonla. Practically the entire text this and thut—tag days, drives and It Is ensy to see that great economic is taken from Boswell’s Life of charity advertising—so the story-goes, «van bitten h,v a dog. He went on to Johnson. An attractive book with "business ns usual.’' When word got advantage nccrued to the Individual, and hence to the race, through the ac many fine Illustrations. around his outer office nnd a rouple of quisition of self consciousness. It en Clements, Colin C. Plays for a I his Irritants Inquired solicitously of aided each man to economize enor him: folding theatre. mously his expenditure of energy by “You have just been bitten by a concentrating upon definite deslrnble Six one act plays for mall theatre? requiring simple sets and possible fot mad dog?" accomplishments. Instinctive Impulses “Yea. I waa." (Tluslnesa of not knd urges now had something to an Inexperienced actors. looking up.) chor and control them, Instead of be Anderson, Maxwell. You Wbt “What I And yon came right to lug switched about by every new and have Dreams. your office?" t passing sense impression. Man had Poems by one of the authors oi "Yea. There waa seine writing 1 acquired the capability of thinking "What Price Glory,” unusual in felt I Just had to get done." (Busi j consciously “1 want, I will." And so ness of going on writing.) thought and expression. was born egoism.—From "Concerning "Oh, I gee. Wrltlug your will, I j Irascible Strong," by William H Robinson, Edward Arlington. Tht take It," Smyth. Man Who Died Twice. “No, Writing the names of the A new poem by the dean of pres people I am going to bite when I go ent-day American poets, written in mad."—Merle Thorpe, In Nation’s Swiss Religious Founder , his usual Ironic temper and severe Business. The Mennonltes take their name ly involved style. from that of their founder, Menno Simons, n Swiss religious enthusiast Norton, Grace Pallaw. The Mlller’i A Soft Answer of the Sixteenth century, and l hey Youngest Daughter. They hud been married Just long maintain, according to tile Enc.vclo Wistful and delicate verses woven enough for tlip novelty to have worn pedla Britannica, "a form of Chris about the miller who took bones and off. and the girl was beginning to find tianity which, discarding the sucre stones to grind Into flour and lost her feet, ns her mother would un dotul Idea, owns no authority outside the love of his youngest dnughtei doubtedly have put It. the Bible and the enlightened con "Before we were married. George," science, limits baptism to the believer who tried to find the meaning ol she complained, “you always look a and lays stress on those precepts things. taxi from the ihenter, hill now the hits which vindicate the Hiiuctlty of huiunn Lowell Amy. East Wind. seems good enough. In fact nnylldng life and a man's word.” Lowell, Amy. What’s O’clock. Is good enough for me." Two volumes of poems written bj Her husband frowned, for he seemed Miss Lowoll during the last years ol to he In rather a difficult fix. But he Portents c ' Sneezing her life, and publish« d since het was not long In finding a way net. I In the ancient day« o t Greece nnd death, containing some of her finest "No. darling," he murmured, “don't Komc a sneeze " •« supposed to heat work. think that. Yon aee. I’m so pr* I ot i u Its tra in fa r g re a te r p o rte n ts Ih n n Euwer. Anthony. By Scarlet you. nnd If I look yon In a cub there a mere cold. Tu sneeze while rising would he nobody Io see yon. whereas i from the table or bed was s;:!d to indi Torch and Blade. Characteristic collection of poem.* I can show you off to dozens In the cate approaching death. Yel. to snpeze between midday nnd by the pepnlar Oregon poet, includ bus."—Ixmdon Answers. midnight under favorable planetar« ing “Oregon Snow,’ "The Caves of conditions, wns nn augury of happl Josephine," and many others ot Diet and Cancer ness. Again. If the Greek or R i w familiar Oregon subjects. The theory advanced liy many per Hersey Harold. Singing llawhlde sons that eating a natural or wild diet turned to the right while sneezing, 1» was regr riled ns a happy omen. will prevent cancer has apparently a Book of Wealern Ballads. been contradicted by recent experl Songs of row hoys and western Ridiculous Sentences rangcu done In strong rhymes and menta, reports Hygela Magaxlqe. When imprisonment for 160 years at hurt* rough humor. Illustrât«d by Jerry mice, the type of animals especially suited to cancer experiments, were labor—believed to be the longest sen Delano. placed nn various diets, those fed the hence on record In the Balkans- «*.: Cotterlll. Hltory of Art. wild diet had the highest cancer mor 13 other sentence« of 2.'0 years cnc’ Two generously illustrated vol tallty and those fed an apparently un have been given a Ictder of a hard c umes covering paintings, sculpture balanced diet had the lowest. There Albanian brigands and seme of l«l> ’ ' and architecture from early Egypt waa not the slightest evidence I list lowers for the murder fn 1915 of 1 fried or Well-cooked food wus ass» to the early nineteenth century. Siberian soldiers I d a convent nor Dickinson. G. L. The International elated will« uu Inc reuse In cancer. PrlsretMl Anarchy. 1904-1914. " — * 1 t — ——• — Mr. Dickinson believes that war Already Filled Real Toy Town has now become Incompatible with After the arrival of her baby sister. The rea> toy town of Britain Is Ix»- the continuance of rlvtltatlon, but ' Bully wns trtmeferred from her crlli to don. Wooden toys such as rocklng- that war is Inevitable If nations re 1 another hed and she was not at all horses nnd doll-hauses come In thou- pent the alns and folllea of inter pleanetl ovfr the newcomer's usurping I sands from factories In uouth Ixmdon. national relationship that pieceded i of her former oh*eplng quarter«. I In the old days wooden toys were One day when her mother went Into | mostly made by home workers, each the catastrophe of 1914. In a bril liant and readable narrative he por the nursery to put the baby Io hed she of whom devoted his or her tin«« to found the erlb In a state of upheaval the production of one particular ar trays the chaotic conditions of Aa she approached, a small bat firm International politic« In Europe and voice front Itcneuth the -overs an ticle. Bat the pay waa poor, and the Increasing competition from Germnay warns against tlielr continuance. nounced: •‘Thia bed Is already occu practically kilted thia sort of work. A book deserving the serious atten- pied."—Chicago Tribune. i of every thoughtful American. Pleasure in Hot Dishes Whale Peculiar Feeder Whales are the mortal enemy of herring and baby mackerel, for a big whale will eat several tons of these toothsome though bony little fry In a day. They don't bother about the bones. They go about it like a steam shovel, says a writer In the Pathfinder Magazine. They simply gulp in a great mass of fish and water, and screen the fish out with their peculiar "baleen” strainers, or they swallow the fish and blow out the water through a hand some fountain In the top of their head, according to the model on which their works are constructed. Seamen Fond of Pete Most ocean, ships, especially the car go carriers, are fioatlng zoos. Seamen have a passion for birds and animals and members of the crew rnd officers take delight In acquiring unusual specimens front the vurious countries they visit. Recently ships berthed In New York boasted among their pets cats that catch Hying fish, strange ani mals froth Madagascar that can kill hawks alighting on the ship, long necked giraffes, u baby elephant, cockatoos, parrots, macaws, toothpick birds, and constrictors, pythons and other snakes. Coveted Decoration On January 29. 1850, on the close of the Crimean war, the Victoria cross was instituted In Great Britain. The cross Is uwarded for conspicuous bravery. It was extended In 1911 and 1920. This decoration Is worn before all others, on the left breast, and con sists of a bronze Maltese cross 1% inches In diameter, with the royal crown surmounted by a lion, and be neath Is the inscription, “For Valour.’ Thi» coupon and 2 Jc entitle the under, signed to one 35c can of Acme Quality Enamel-Kote, any color, end • special 20c Paint Brush. Address---------------------| — — . To aequsint you w ith Acme Q uality.w e are making a spe- ____ _ _ c is l offer for a SPECIAL O /J Surfaces RENEW ED T his tells you o f a new dis covery thousands o f women are m aking. It is Enam el- K ote, the woodwork and fur niture finish w ith which dingy and dull things can be brought back to beauty in a fascinat ing, sim ple way. P ay out no m oney for new furniture to replace old, until first you have m ade a trial and convinced yourself about E nam el-K ote. ACME QUALITY Piint^Virnish For over forty years, the best paint and varnish for every purpose has been Acme Quality. Before you buy any paint, come in and see us. We are here to serve you. A.«. TELEPHONE MEAT 0BDEBS The Department of Agriculture during the past year carried on an investigation In regard to the retail ing of meats. Hundreds of house wives were interviewed and it was found that slightly over 56 per cent of them were in the habit of going to the shops and making their select ions personally, 24 per cent Indicat ing that it waa their custom to tele phone their meat orders and 9 per cent employed their husbands «£ purchasing agents. The telephone forms a very Im portant piece of equipment in the retail market the investigation shows, 50 per cent of the wealthy class depending almost entirely on the telephone and 37 per cent of the well-to-do class. Very few of the poorer class of families buy by tele On the Smoker A house painter once sat next to the phone. great Sargent nnd asked him for the loan of a match. Then, noticing the PLAIN BONE MEAL GIVES great painter’s brushes, easel and box of colors, he said genially: MINERALS NEEDED BY COWS “I see we’re both In the same line.” “1 see we are,” said Sargent, with a The only minerals needed for dairy laugh. cows, except salt, are calcium and "I’ve been whltewashln' a barn to day,” said the house painter. “How's phosphorus, experiments conducted by various stations in the United trade with you?” - "Brisk," said Sargent “I coated a States show, and these are to be village this morning and gave second found in meet economical form in coats to ti castle, a river nnd a moun sterilized bone meal or flour, ac tain this afternoon. I finished up the cording to a statement made by the day with a flash of lightning—gold- county agent In a reply to requests leafed her, you know." for information -on the subject. “Gosh, some hustlin' I" said the An analysis of one ton of steamed house painter. “You sure must be on bone meal disclosed that it contained piecework.” 581 pounds of calcium and 286.4 pounds of phosphorus. A ton of Valuable Wood highly advertised mixture sometimes Bird’s-eye maple Is found from New sold to dairy men showed 44 pounds foundland to Georgia and westward of calcium and three pounds of to the northern shores of the Great phosphorus. The ton of bone meal lakes, eastern Nebraska and Kansas. cost $75, and the ton of the highly When the grain has a pronounced wavy appearance the wood Is called advertised mixture cost $300, and bird’s-eye maple and Is used as a ve the latter contained only about five neer. The forest servl«*e says that per cent as much of the desired in there is a pnrasltlc growth that gets gredients as the plain bone meal. The bone meal may be fed by be Into the wood of the maple nad causes a swelling, which when cut off straight ing placed in a trough where cattle by the saw appears as eyes. This does may eat it at pleasure, or it may be not harm the wood but makes It more mixed with feed at the rate of two valuable. Generally speaking, this pounds iff 100 pounds of grain feed. wood is scarce. Negro Segregation Law is Held Invalid Washington, D. C.—The segregation law of Louisiana under which white and negro communities are establish ed was held Invalid by the supreme court. Benjamin Harmon alleged that 'he New Orleans ordinance and the state law upon which It was based vio lated the fourteenth amendment to the federal constitution giving negroes equal protection of the law. Under the New Orleans ordinance, a major- fy of the residents on any street de termined whether it was to be a ‘white” or a “negro” community. A building permit was refused Benjamin Harmon, on the ground that he was converting a house in a white com munity into a "double oottage,” to be rented to a negro. School Principal at Eugene Quits. Eugene, Or.—Alter a year fraught with stormy episodes, including a feud between principal and students cli maxed in a public whitewashing for the former, John G. Swan has ten dered his resignation as principal of the Eugene high school. PRINTS OF MASTERPIECES ABE AT COUNTY LIBRARY An exhibit o f” colofed'"prints of world famous masterpieces is being shown at the county library, ac cording to Miss Hall, librarian. Loan of the exhibition was made by the American Federation of Arts. The selection was choeen especially to appeal to the home and school. The exhibit will remain in Pendle ton during the month of March. COMMERCIAL CLUB MEMBERS VISIT WHITE HATCHER1 Members of the commercial clu: to the number of about a dozer, went to the W hite hatchery Tuesday following the noon luncheon. They saw some newly hatched chicks in cartons ready for shipping, sav. some machines in which the chick.' were about ready to be removed, and other machines bearing trays full ol eggs just prepared for incubation. NUMBER OF GARDENS HERE TO SHOW BIG INCREASE Hermiston will have more gardens within the city limits this year than for several seasons, according to ob servations made by H. A. Pankow who will be in charge of irrigation water for the city again this summer "Nearly every available lot west c t the railroad tracks has been plowed in preparation for seeding to garden truck,” he said, “and there wSE be the usual number of plots east of the tracks." The time for the first irrigation has not yet been set, Mr. Pankow said, and with showers still prevail ing h is probable that the first run will not be made before April 2 or April 9. WORSHIP OF MAMMON CAUSE OF BURDENS, SPEAKER SAYS Christians Fail to Live up to Ga Teachings, Lecturer Tells Audience. G. R. Pollock, traveling represen tative of the nternational Bible Students association, spoke on Sun day to an audience that filled the I. O. O. F. hall. His topic was “Tiff World’s Only Hope.” Mr. Poll during the course of his lecture cussed many of the vital issues of It' day. He impressed upon his ; • ence that "you can not serve God and Mammon." Mr. Pollock said in pari “Altho we profess to be a Christian country, and although the civilized nations of the earth profess to he lieve the standards of Christian t our course has not been in bar with the precepts set forth by r— Master. Religious leaders, who y fess that their Lord stated c :ame not to destroy men’s live, to save them, have even tak n ;tand on the1 side of war. Every ■ hat has been fought, from the 1 « of the crusades until the timei, has been honored an 1 i ?or and glorified by the cler y ih ttse instances they have fo -g Tod and sought, rather than - oroval, the smile and appro« .1 Mammon. ‘‘Political leaders also, while mak ing great boasts of their endeavors to lift up and bless mankind, have used their power to selfish ends, thinking more of their office than of their ;»ower to use it for the common weal. "Selfish men, men with Intelli gence, who could be used to relieve mankind of much pf the burden of oppression— many of them profess ing to worship the true God— have manipulated the prices of food and raiment, the fundamental products of ife, and have profiteered therein, fflicting the people with a heavier «urden. This has been actuated by be worship of Mammon. "May we hope that the people may ver be delivered from this sad rtata f affairs, and be permitted to enter .ito the Joys of peace, prosperity, lealth, life, liberty and happiness vhich this earth is capable of giv- ng to her human inhabiters. F c if this deliverance is accomplish the people w ill surely know that the ne who brings tljem out of C haos of selfishness into a condit if good w ill toward men is worthy of their adoration and praise. Jeho vah, the God of the Bible, the G< d of Heaven, has promised to brln about this release.” Oil Well Inspected . N. H. Cottrell of Portland speni Tuesday and Wednesday In Hermis ton looking over the oil well and con BLESSING HARDWARE CO. ferring with E. P. Dodd as to fur HERMISTON, 0BEG0N. ther drilling. He left last night and At the meeting of the Community w ill present his findings to his asso ciates In Portland. He was chiefly club held Tuesday afternoon in the lntereeted In the possibilities of find library a decision was made to re march has maintained this year's sume regular meetings. The work ing natural gas. record for rainfall. of the organization has been inter rupted for several months. Mrs Hay Demand Active The hay market has been active Charles Taylor was elected presi- for the past week, and demand is dent. A special meeting to take up keen, according to local dealers. special business was called to be held NOTICE TO CBEDIT0BS The price has remained unchanged next Monday afternoon in the lib- Notice is hereby given that the with $10 per ton net to growers rrary. undersigned has been appointed ad prevailing where the haul to cars ministrator of the estate of George Mr. and Mr3. John Jendrzejewski can be made for a dollar per ton. Anderson, deceased, In the County have Joined the ranks of turkey Court in the State of Oregon, for growers. They recently bought six When you need any Hamm’s Milking Again Umatilla County. AH persons hav head of foundation stock and plan thing in the fine of The cow owned by Walter Hamm ing claims against the said estate to add to the flock. “We have is again in production, following neat and attractive are hereby required to present such plenty of range and no close neigh the birth of a boy calf last Saturday. claims duly verified, and with proper bors,” he said the other day while Printing. In Mr. Hamm’s own words, “ Mother vourhers attached, to the undersigned In town, "and we think there is and son are both getting along nice money in the liusiness.” nt the office of Raley, Raley & War ner, In the First National Bank ly ” Building, In Pendleton, Oregon, with in six months from date of this not ice, the same being dated and pub lished the first time thia 17th (lay of February, 1927. M. H. HOBSON. As administrator of the estate of George Anderson, deceased. Raley, Raley & Warner & John F. Kilkenny, Modern business is constantly increasing the uses in which it can profit- | Attorneys for Administrator. 24-Btc Wants Navy Ban OMy o* Paolfle. London.—Great Britain has infor mally suggested to President Coolidge hat his proposed trl-p«rtite disarma ment conference concern Pacific ar- aaments only, It was learned. DON’T FORGET - - - US--- USE MORE PRINTING I 0T1CE TO CREDITORS N« t o la hereby given that the tinder«! rned has been appointed ex ecutrix of the last w ill and testament of Marlon Phyllis Hoisington, de ceased, In the County Court In the State of Oregon, for Umatilla Coun ty. All persons having claims against the said estnte are hereby required to present such claims duly verified, and with proper vouchers attached, to the undersigned at the office of Raley. Raley A Warner in the First National Bank Building. In Pendle ton, Oregon, within six months from date of this notice, the same being dated and published the first time this 24th day or February, 1927. Eve H. Hoisington Executrix of the last will and teet- ment of Marton Phyllis Hoisington, Deceased. Raley, Raley A Warner nnd John F. Kllkennsy, Attorneys for Execu r - f l T THE HERALD WANT ADS— trix. 2$-5tc. —* •» “On« of the delights of a summer In a country boarding house was getting meals piping hot." said a city woman. "I had about forgotten how delicious a dish was when It was served smok ing bob For so long I have had dishes brought to the table by the maid only warm or at the beat merely hot Now. there Is a wide difference between a piping hot dish and a hot dish, a dif ference which may make a meal a huge success or an Indifferent affair. “But In these days of gas stoves it Is not a simple matter to keep vege tables hot, and so one has almost be come accustomed to them Just past the warm stage. But when a smoking meal Is dished up right from the coal stove Into a waiting covered dish there is a heartiness, a geniality about the entire meal which makes for good digestion and sociability."—Spring- field Union. 24 FEB CENT OF WOMEN | ■ M ably employ printing. Whether business is quiet, or rushing, printing may be used by the wide awake merchant to improve his lot. ■ ■ B Advertising : Is the life blood of merchandising, in the country town as well as in the metropolis. It stimulates demand, disseminates information, creates good will and builds for the future. ■ Printed Forms Are needed in evero line of business. They create favorable impressions and effect economy in handling details. Take stock right now of the possibilities in your business for the econcmi- cal use of more priniing. Maybe we can help you. We will cheerfully be of any assistance possible. S " ■ i ■ ■ j » £ 5 ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■«■■■■■■■■■■■■«■■¿■■■■■■■■■■»■■■■■s»