Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1927)
WB BA t n . HBBMMTOK, ORBGOK. TEAM W ORK COLUMBIA THEATRE Under new management— Mrs. Lucy A. Sandys Special Music Friday and Saturday November 25 and 26 “THE BIO SHOW” Starring John Lowell and Evangeline Russell. A three-ring cir cus with elephants In the winter time. Friday and Saturday ’ November 27-28 O “THE SHADOW OF THE LAW” Starring Clar Bow, the most popular star of 1927, the Flapper Queen. An mazing story of law. love and crooks, fought by a lone girl. la necessary, not only in football, but in business andlife. Co-operative effort on the part of individuals and institutions is beoomng increasingly Important “Backing up” its customers is a w ork that has been done w itl prudence and foresight by this bank for 20 years. We welcome net« accounts, new team mates. First N a tio n a l B ank Tuesday and Wednesday November 28-30 “WINGS OF THE STORM” .. .Staring the Famous Dog, Thunder. Illustrating the human in telligence and i’evt tion of a dog. This picture is one of the great credits to the motion picture industry. Friday, December 2 “TEE LADY FROM HELL” A wonderful drama of mysteries governing and Influencing life. Saturday, December 3 "TRAIL DUST” Presented by the Miller Bros, of the 101 Ranch, lal ad. The season’s greatest pioneer drama. See th spec- of Hermiston C a p ita l, S urplu s and U n d ivid ed P ro fits O ver $50 ,0 0 0 F. B. Swayae, Pres. R. Alexander, Vice-President A. H. Norton, Cashier V HTAÖS ' *(,R SAL* . iri 12 wants place to work for room and board. V. F. Austin, General delivery. 12-ltc W hite Leghorn and Buff Orpington Ckrls., *1.60 and *2 each. C. C. Cllnesmlth. HERMISTON LOCALS High school Vaudeville December FOR SALE— First cutting alfalfa $7; 16. a ton. Allen Von Behren. 12-4tc Irrigon visitors here for trading the first of the week were Mr. and Odd Job Repairs I do clclmlnlng and build cess Mrs. F. H. Rleks, R. L. Wisdom, Os pools. S. Jensen. 4-tfc car Otto, R. V. Jor.es, M. F. Caldwell and F. C. Fredrickson. FOR RENT— Small house with acre and 3-5 ground. Inquire Kings Papers for the cow-testing associa ley’s 52-tfc tion are to be sent away by Decem ber 1, and anyone who hau not sign Watch, clock and Jewelry repairing. ed up but is interested In doing so, See Newell, next door to Sappers. should communicate with G. H. Jens- 13-tfe klns at his office at ouce. Hermiston Second Hand Store. Turkey growers o the project are FOR SALE— R. I. Red and Barred R. Furniture and Hardware, Bee Sup already making plans for handling young roosters, 25c lb. Mrs. plies, Harness, Saddles, Wagons. their output quickly and efficiently Hutchins, on F. C. McKenzie place SS-Sfe when the time comes for shipping 6 ml. east of town. for the Christmas market. REAL ESTATE EXCHANGES AJÍD FOR RENT— Four room house on INSURANCE. J. M. BIGGS, RE A. E. Porter was a business visi Main street. A. W. Purdy. 10-4p ALTOR. XBHc tor to Pendleton Monday. FOR SALE OR TRADE— Horses for S9-tfc cows, sheep or pigs. Claude Mey Burk’s for Bargains. Howard Reid w ill spend the holi ers, 2 miles east of Echo. 10-4p RADIO— Crosley and Atwter Kent- day with relatives in Colfax, Wash. best by test, Will demonstrate. C. For sale— Feed barley 33 per cent Little Rosella Matot was operated soft wheat, *37 per ton. Stanfield L. Upham. on Wednesday at the Hermiston hos ranch. 9-4tc. pital for the removal of tonsils. Hermiston Second Hand* Store. — For sale— Chinchilla rabbits, either Furniture and Hardware, Harness, Among those from out of town at sex, from prize winning stock.*5 Saddles, Wagons. llt f c . tending the State Beekeeprs’ meet each. Mrs. C. W. Tilden. 9-tfc Scissors sharpened, 25 centc. Shaar’s ing were noted 3. D. Williams, Port For sale— For automobile or radio, Barber shop. 10-2J.C land; Herman Ahlers, Kuappa; P. NeKetn, Nehalen; B. R. Curtis, Wal none better.genuine Ford battery, now *10.50 and your old battery. For sale— White Globe turnips *1 per lowa; Eber D. Mossle, Echo; B. I. Kellogg Motor Co. 8-5tc. sack at ranch. S. L Carson. 9-6p. Feguson, Salem; Jens Peterson, Rich land, Wash.; C. Tilling, Portland; E. For sale— Wlneeap apples, 3 grades. For first clasg drees making call on R. Sires, 8tanfield; Virgil Sires, Yak Mrs. A. E. Dahlman and Mrs. W. C. ima; Oliver Slrea, Wapato; L. G. Tom Stewart. 7-tfo. Isom at the former’s home. Remod Penny, Stanfield; C. 0. Peters, Los Foor sale— A new supply of adding eling and designing a specialty Angeles, Cal. machine rolls at the Herald. Phone 28-W, Hermiston. 9tfc. Geoge Ridings of Echo has pur- For sale— Christmas cards at the Try Burk's for Bargains. S9-tfe chased and moved onto the 20 acre Herald, 5 and 10 cents each by ranch In the Columbia district for the box, including printing. Val merly owned by John Hoifman. FEED PRICE QUOTATIONS ue« that w ill surprise you. For sale— Remington typewriter, No 10, good condition. Also good No. 22 DeLaval cream separator, ca pacity 1250 lbs. per hr. Andy An- deregg. 10 tfc. Burk’s, headquarters for Army Shoes. 39-tfc FOR SALE— Baled alfalfa hay, by the bale, ton, lot or carload. Call at office or phone 141. Leathers ft Little. 2-tfc FOR SALE— Good Jersey milk, morn ing and evening deliveries. Milk on Ice at the house at all hours. Phons 25-M. H. S. Hanby. 42-tfc FOR SALE— 1 Big 6 McCormick mower; 1 bay rake. Inland Empire Lumber Co. 39-tfc FOR SALE— Christmas cards at the Herald office. A wide variety of beautiful cards at reasonable prices, including printing. Call and them early. 8-tf FBR sAt-m— No. 1 fresh eows. B. ■amnsBr. 17-tfo For eale— Super power battery, 13 plate, fits 90 per cent of all autos, only $10.60 and your battery. Kellogg Motor Co. 8-5te. Reliable woman will care for chil dren. Inquire Hurly’s. ll- 3 c Wanted-Laundry work at Hotel Cor ns. We call and deliver. Apart- raenta, furnished, or unfurnished, for rent. 5-tfe. Real Estate Fire insurance and trades. List your property with me for sale or ex change. W. A. Leathers. 4-tfe. INSURANCE PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE ANCE COMPANY. JOHN HADDOX, INSUR HERMISTON. Friends of Mrs. Earl Mitchell are glad to hear that she is Improved from her recent serious illness. W. H. Daughtry of Echo was here on business Wednesday. Dr. and Mrs. Gilbert Holt and Fan nie Todd were at the R. C. Todd home for the holiday. F. J. Jarvis of Glentana, Montana, arrived Wednesday to visit his sister^ Mrs. C. C. Durfey. Mrs. O. F. Wittenberg of Hood River1 was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Lucy Sandys, for the holiday. Rebels Slay 52 In Train. El Paso, Tex.—Eight women and four children were among fifty-two persons killed when a Juarez passen ger train was attacked and looted by 500 rebels at Palmira, north of Aguas Calientes, according to a special dis patch from Mexico City to a local Mex ican newspaper. Stages Must Pick Up Anywhere. Salem, Or.—Henceforth all motor stages operating intrastate between fixed termini In Oregon are required to pick up passengers at any point on the highways. This Is required by an order of the public service commis sion made public recently. Block Plans Fight on Meyer. Washington, D. C.—A contest over the confirmation of Eugene Meyer, who was appointed chairman of the federal farm loan bureau by President Coolidge last spring, is brewing in the senate, with members of the farm bloc leading the opposition. Farm Ex-Kaiser's Sistar, 63, Weds Russian. Bonn, Germany.—Princess Victoria of Schaumburg-LIppe, 63-year-old sis ter of the former kaiser, was married tt the town hall here to her young Russian fiance, Alexander Zoubkoff, Mrs. Bert Haneline was hostess at tged 27. (Furnished by Farm Bureau Co-oper a small sewing party Friday after ative of Hermiston. Unisse other noon. wise specified, prices are per hundred The small child of Mr. and Mrs weight.) Scratch 120g ___ _____________ $2.76 Frank Ward of Stanfield was a pat BraD, 60g ...................... ............ — .$0 ient at the Hermiston hospital last Egg Mash ------------ 2.46 week. Broader Industry in Home Chap Ground Oats .............. ....... ........— 2.25 Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Leathers spent Ground B a r le y ............................... 2.00 ter and in Field Development Wheat ............................................. 2.05 Thanksgiving with relatives in Pen dleton. B of Disaster Service. Corn, No. 2.......... 2.25 Cracked Corn, No. 2........ 2.35 Volunteer Industry In the American Erskine J. Sandy came from Cor Ground Corn, No. 2___ 2.35 Red Cross Is on an upward trend, due vallis to spend Thanksgiving with Mill Run, 80a............ 1.24 to the broader demand for assistance Cow Feed .......................... - _____ 2.28 his mother, Mrs. Lucy Sandys, owner In meeting disaster relief require Ground Wheat_______________ 2.16 of the Columbia theatre. ments. Men and women from Red Cross Shorts, 80s...... ............. .............. ..... 1.82 Chapters in the last year exampled by Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Dodd and Ruth their work for disaster victims a great Rolled Barley. 70s......... 1.54 Calf Meal, per pound__________ 3%c spent the holiday with relatives In er activity than In any year since the end of the World War. Middlings ..... 1.90 Pendleton. This service was given without stint Oyster s h e l l ______________ .90 Miss Rose Donovan left Wednes and zlth the finest of spirit, accord Whole O a ts___________________ 2.15 Ing to Red Cress officials. Volunteer Salt, half ground 60s....... - ..............45 day night for Lewiston, Idaho, to be Red Croes Workers have served by the with her parents over the holiday. thousands with the local Chapters In garment production, printing raised- Herbert Haneline was tom e from type reading matter for the blind. In O. A. C. to spend Thanksgiving. hospital service, as canteen workers and motor corps aids. Nearly all ac of having teeth extracted Mr. and Mrs. Bro’icher of Pilot tive Chapter workers are volunteers. ta*e More than 90 per cent of the avail Rock were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. able reading material for the blind is M. Best the first of the week. produced by volunteer Red Cress Rev. 8. Hamrick, Mrs. Hamrick workers. Volunteers produced 176,481 garments, 2,067,912 surgical dressing! and Mrs. Hugh Taylor were In Pen (or hospital use, and 6,398 articles (or dleton tor a day the first of the emergency closets maintained by Red Inexpensive week. Cross Chapters In various communities From five to ten minutes completes for disaster and other emergencies. operation. Kitty Short, niece of Sirs. C. C. The garment production, large as It Durfey of Hermiston, has received was, did not Include the thousands of word that she has been awarded a garments made fer the Mississippi scholarship by the noted Jnllliard flood sufferers by volunteers. Another Pendleton, Oregon Music Foundation of New York city. important volunteer service Is the prep a rat ion and sending of 30,000 Christ Usually the scholarship carles with mas bags to soldiers and bluejackets It the proviso that those receiving it on duty In foreign stations. go to N0w York to study under the Subscribe Ver The Herald Approximately 260 Chapters partlcl Foundation faculty, but Mias 8bort pate In Motor Corps service, while the has sen allowed to emaln in Los growing Interest of volunteers In Angeles and carry out her work with health work constitutes an additional Instrwetors appoveft by the Founda community safeguard In emergencies tion. Three pupils of F. X. Arena. when the eervlcea of regular nursee might be overtaxed. ' Mias Short’s coach tu Los Angeles, Volunteer service will be an Impor received scholarships in the competi tant (actor In the forthcoming elev tion, a mark of the excellence of enth Annual Roll Call, from November his standing as a teacher. II in 24, In enrolling the 5,000,000 membership to bo oeogbt. RED CROSS VOLUNTEER WORKERS BIG FACTOR HAVE NO EEAR GAS No Shock-No Pau Dr. R. B. R obbins Legal Bkaks for Sale at This O f f i c i RED CROSS FLOOD RELIEF IN SOUTH COSTS $17,000,000 VINEYARD LODGE NO. 20«, L O. O. F. meets each Monday evening In Odd Fellows’ hall. Visiting members cor dially Invited. W. R. Longhorn, Secretary. Custis Simons, N. O. Greatest Disaster of History but One of 1T1 Operations in • Year of Calamity. Tornadoes headed the Hat of dlsao- ! tera which struck the United States ! in the past year, the report of Red , Cross relief operations for the year ending June 80, showing 29 great i storms. Floods were second on the j list, 24 being recorded for the same I period. This record does not Include the S t Louts tornado which occurred In the current fiscal year, as did a num ber of other storms and disasters since, in which the Red Cross provid ed relief. Included In the list of i l l disasters covered by the record of the past year’s relief operations of the Red Cross, are earthquakes, explosions, mine disasters, a cloudburst, a hail storm, Urea, floods, hurrlcaues, a rail road wreck, a acarlet fever epidemic, typhoid epidemic, tornadoes, and a typhoon. The latter occurred in the Philippines, but Is Included In the operations at home. In all. the Red Cross extended Its services In 77 ma jor disasters tn the United States and In 20 abroad. Including a hurricane over Havana, Cuba, and the Isle of Pines, one In the Bahamas, and oth ers through various West Indian re gions, Are In Porto Rico, another In Haiti, earthquakes In Araiouia, Japan and Albania, floods in Jugo Slavla and Mexico. The organization conducted refugee relief operations in Syria. Bulgaria and China, the latter largely due to factional wars fought over various parts of China the past year. The two outstanding disasters at home were the Florida hurrlcano and the Mississippi Valley flood. Rehabili tation operations of the latter disaster are still in progress under the Ited Cross. A national appeal for funds was made in both disasters, resulting In contributions for relief amounting to more than *20,000,000. The Mississippi flood Is the out standing disaster in the whole hlRtory of the Red Cross disaster relief serv ice. In this one catastrophe the or ganization raised through subscrip tions by the people of the country and foreign nations approximately *17,- 000,000 for relief use. Aided by this fund It fed, clothed, sheltered or oth erwise assisted more than 600.000 hu man beings, 'fed and cared for ap proximately 200,000 head of livestock and established 149 refugee camps The flood Inundated approximately 20,000 square miles and affected 174 counties In eight states. Some 330,- 000 homeless persons were sheltered In Red Cross camps. When the emer gency was at Its height the Red Cross was serving more than a million meals a day. So vast was the work Imposed on the Red Cross and allied agencies conducting rehabilitation that th;» phase of the flood relief task Is ex pected to extend well Into the coming year. Up to September 15, 104,441 families tn the flood zone had been given rehabilitation assistance by the Red Cross, and 1,700,000 acres of flooded crop land In seven States had been replanted with Red Cross aid. There had been expended or commit ted for expenditure in connection with this relief and rehabilitation work a total of *15,060,000. The appeal for a nation-wide mem bership Increased to 5.000,000 adult members. It was pointed out, Is based on the realization that demands on Red Cross service such as occasioned by disaster relief are Increasing eurb year. For that reason especial Ira portance Is lent to the Eleventh An nual Roll Call of the organization, to be held from Armistice Day, Novem ber 11. to Thanksgiving. November 24, during which this membership will be built up. --------------- Y 14 Disasters at One Time Call for Red Cross W ork The great size of a disaster does not necessarily mean that It hat the stage to itself. The American Red Cross relief forces were Impressed with this fact during the Mississippi Valley flood In recent months. While the relief forces were struggling with thia greatest of all disasters In United States history, from April to June they were obliged to fur nish relief in 21 other emergencies, including 11 tornadoes. In one tor nado approximately 17,000 persons were assisted. At one period the Red Cross was conducting relief operstiona In 14 disasters simultaneously, scattered over a wide territory. Citing the continuity of demands on the organization’s resources. Chairman John Barton Payne of the Red ''rose hat announced the need of 6,000,000 adult members as a reeOlt of the Roll Call, Nov. 11 to 24. Tho Tenth Anniversary of Amer > lea’s entry Into the World War in 1917, Is an appropriate timo to Join the American Red Croes and parlici pate through membership In Its peace- f time services. Join during the Antiaal 1 Red) Call, November H to 24. PROFESSIONAL CARDS BOYD T. JENKINS, D. M. D. associated with F. V. PRIME, D. M D. General Dentistry X-Ray and Diagnosis Bank Bldg. Phone Connection Evenigs by appointment. w . 7. W ARNER Attorney-at-Law Henniiton h i: t Oregon s. M c K enzie , m d - Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat Office; 1-2-3 Inland Empire Bldg. Pendleton, Oregon JAMES L. SEARS, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office Phone 733. Res. Phone 71$ Office in First National Bank Nldg. DR. DAVID S. ROWE, Chiropractor and Physiotherapist Specializing in Acute and Chronic Disease. Location, 2 doors west of Postoffice Hours, 10 to 6, and by appointment. Office Phone 303 Res. Phone 313 HERMISTON, OREGON !■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■* ; J. L. V A U G H A N ; 206 East Court St. ANY AND E verthing E lectrical FOR YOU ■ Phone 139 Pendleton, O n. s ■ H o m e C oqking IS OUR SFECIALTY HOME MADE PASTRY WE SERVE 40o LUNCH FR0M 11:30 TILL 3 :0 0 P. M. Fried Chicken, home style, 50o SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURf Open 5:30 to 9:30. REX CAFE F O U N T A IN Cigars, Tobacco Barber Shop B ert M ullins W e H ave A n ticip a ted Your needs in everything that is necessary to com plete your golf outfit. C om e in and g iv e our line the « on ce over. » HITT —TRY THE HERALD WANT APS—