The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, July 19, 1928, Image 5

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    »> HTOALP. HEKMIBTON, PREGO*.
COLUMBIA THEATER
HERMISTON ,ORE.
Saturday and Sunday
July 21 and 22
“VANITY,” Starring LEATRICE JOY AND CHARLES BAY
SAVE
The story— Is there class distinction in this country? A pic­
ture showing the futility of wealth, social standing and appearance
when opposed to the fundamentals of human nature.
Wednesday and Thursday
July 25 and 26
RIN-TIN-TIN in "A DOG OF THE BEGIMENT”
To earn money is one thing, but to eave money is a more impor­
tant thing Many fortunes have grown out of pennies saved in
youth.
As a protection against destitution in case of illness or unem­
ployment, saving has come to be an absolute necessity.
People who spen all they earn really live above their income
even though they may not be in debt!
First N ational Bank
of Hermiston
Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits O ver $50,000
P B. Swayne, Pres.
R. Alexander, Vice-President
A. H. Norton, Cashier
Pumpkin Staple Food
of Early Coloniata
WANT ADS
On New England farms the pump­
kin is a valuable article of food today
as it was 300 years ago. It is easy to
grow, easy to cook and easy to keep
In a dried form. One Colonial poet
showed his appreciation In this coup
let:
FOB SALE
FOR SALE— Early apples on the tree
2 l-2c; windfalls lc , at the ranch.
Bert Nation.
46-3tp
As you all know Rin-Tln-Tln Is the world's most famous dog ant
is his best picture and shows him as a flying hero. Two shows each
night. Admission, 25-60c
July 28 and 29
Saturday and Sunday
“HEAVEN ON EARTH”
Starring Renee Adoree and Conrad Nagel.
You have never
seen a picture like "Heaven on Earth.” It Is truly different. It
makes you realize that motion pictureg ar getting bigger and better.
Renee Adoree was the heroine of the Big Parade.
w o __ m SPRAY
te
em
dead
flie s, mosquitoes,
roaéhes tfmofhs, I ice
and manyoïher insects
STANDARD OTT. m
w w
n u çattforn TA
We h ave p u m p k in , at m orning and
pum pkins a t noon;
If It w ere not for pum pkins w e should
be undone.
Although there were many ways in
which the fruit was prepared, stewed
pumpkin sauce and pumpkin bread
were nmong the most popular. In
making the bread, a half quantity of
FOR SALE— Dairy ranch and cows, Indian meal was used and the loaf
or will trade. See F. A. Wagner. was not particularly attractive in ftp
41-tfc pearnnce. A traveler In New Hamp­
shire In 1704 wrote of pumpkin bread
FOR SALE— 1924 Star touring car. as an “awkward food.” Occasionally
Inquire Herald.
44-3tp one still finds it in rural sections of
Connecticut and Rhode Island.
The Indian custom of cutting the
For sale, trade or rent— Three room
■ cottage On west side. A. W. Ag­ rind from pumpkins, stringing the
new.
31-tfc pieces and drying them was followed
by the white Colonists.
Foor sale— A new supply of adding
Sandwiches in Ditpute
machine rolls at the Herald.
England is much wrought up over
Pasture For Rent— 1 mile west of
the question as to whether sand
town.
S. T. Davis.
44-2tp wiches really make people “stupid.”
recent educational conference
At
gJgJC ELLAN KU Ut*
it was stated that, in one school,
WANTED— Experienced waitress at children who brought their own
Hermiston Hotel.
46-ltc luncheon ate sandwiches “half an Inch
thick and filled with meat.” “If the
Four room furnished house for rent. meats of these children consist of
Inquire at Floyd Knerr's shop or this sort of thing," was the comment,
“it Is no wonder that their wits are
residence.
dulled.” Workers who relish the
FOR RENT— Small modern house, hrend and meat combination resent
being called "dull,“ and the meat-lov-
reasonable. Inquire Dr. Prime.
44-tfc tng English say the fault In the diet,
if any, must be In eating too much
FR fERS for sale.' Mrs. Henry Ott. bread.
44c
FOR SALE— Bedstead ana springs, 2
writing desks, phonograph and other
furniture. Mrs. C. S. Brlerley.
46-2tp
Rattler» Don’t Lay Egga
FOR RENT— Good bluegrass pasture
for cows. B. J. Nation.
36-tfc
INSURANCE
PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE INSUR­
ANCE COMPANY.
JOHN HADDOX,
HERMISTON.
Hermiston Second Hand Store. —
Furniture and Hardware, Harness,
Saddles, Wagons. Wandering Jew
slips, 35c dozen.
11-tfc
Watch, clock and Jewelry repairing.
SCe Newell, next door to Sapper«.
lt-tf.
REAL ESTATE EXCHANGES AND
INSURANCE. J. M. BIQGS, RE­
ALTOR.
2l-»fe
Card of Thanks
We wish to thank the many friends
of Hermiston and Stanfield for the
many kindnesses shown us during
the long Illness of our husband and
father; those who so kindly assisted
In caring for him; for the beautiful
floral offerings, and those who so
kindly made the last arrangements
for us.
Mrs. C. S. Brlerley,
Miss Brlerley.
♦
♦
HERMISTON LOCALS
♦
♦
A A U » » » O O O O O O O O O O
Regular services at Baptist-Chrlst-
ian church Sunday, July 22. Bible
school 10 A. M. PTeachlng services.
11 A. M. The pastor ts still out of
town and A. E. Bensel will have
charge of the morning service. C. E.
at 7 P. M. Evening union services
at this church with Brother Hamrick
in charge.
a
Dr. and Mrs. Boyd Jenkins and
children were In Walla Walla Sun
day. Dr. Jenkins left the family with
friends In Walla Walla and went
fishing. He got several fish, but the
thing that caused him to be most
excited wag to find several rattle-
suake? in the hllla.
When anyone speak of rattlesnake
eggs, give him the laugh.
Rattlesnakes do not lay eggs. Along
with copperheads, water moccasins
and water snakes, they bring forth
their young alive. The young snakes
are usually born late In summer, from
July to September.
Among the snakes whose young are
hatched from eggs are the pine snnke,
king snuke, bull snake, and blue racer.
The eggs of these species are laid
early in summer and the period of in­
cubation varies with climatic condi­
tions.
Alr-Rall Transport 8ervics Promlssd.
Chicago.—Three northwest railroads
—the Northern Pacific, the Chicago,
Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific, and
the Chicago Burlington & Quincy—
and two air transportation companies
entered into an agreement recently to
provide air and rail transportation
from Chicago to the Pacific coast, via
Minneapolis and St. Paul.
THE MARKETS
Portland
Wheat — Big Bend blueatem. hard
white, »1.42; soft white, western
white, »1.32; hard winter. »1.22; north­
ern spring, »1.25; western red, »1.22.
Hay — Alfalfa »16.50@17; valley
timothy »17.6O®18; eastern Oregon
timothy, »21 ©21.50.
Butterfat—46@47c.
Eggs—Ranch, 27© 31c.
Cattle—8teers, good, »11.25©12.10.
Hogs — Medium to choice, »3.50©
11.75.
Lambs—Good to choice, »11 ©12.25.
Seattle.
Wheat—Soft white, western white,
»1.30 ft; hard winter, western red,
northern spring, »1.31ft; bluestem,
»1.33ft; dark northern spring. »1.38ft;
dark hard winter, »1.25ft,
Hay — Alfalfa, »24; timothy, »30;
P. 8.. »24.
Butterfat—48c.
Eggs Ranch, 24 ©30c.
_____-Prime steers, »11.36 ©13.10.
Catti«
Hogs—Prime. »11.50© 13.6S.
Lambs—Choice, »11.60013.
Spokane.
Hogs — Good, and choice, »11.75©
11.56.
Cgttle—Steer», g«x*. »10 so ©11.09
W— — -----
1
— 1 "■
'.MJLK
VINEYARD LODGE NO.
L O. 0.
The rivers and estuaries of northern F. meets each Monday evening In Odd
Australia spread out over the country Fellows’ hall. Visiting
In great muanars
mudflats miersecieu
Intersected u,
by -■«■■-
shal- . .. ,
tn
d
low"creeks, while everywhere as • [ d£ % ‘n^
h
W.
R.
Longhorn.
Secretary.
waterside growth one ttntls the eternal
Cecil Warner. N. Ck
mangrove.
Along the banks of these creeks and
across the mud-flats lie the blackfel-
PROFESSIONAL
Iowa’ pads or paths, worn and kept
bare by the constant passing of feet;
BOYD T. JENKINS, D. X D.
and tn some reedy bed or muddy pool
associated with
beside these paths the cunning “alli­
F. V. PRIME, D. X. D .
gator” will He waiting for its prey.
It will remain thus, quite motion­
General Dentistry
less, for days, but let some unwary
X-Ray and Diagnosis
creature happen along—a woman, a
Phone Connection
dog, a kangaroo—and instantly it ts on Bank Bldg.
the alert. With exquisite Judgment Evenlgs by appointment.
the foul brute will await the exact
second for action; then a great
armored tall lashes up out of the mud,
with one tremendous sweep, knocking
Attorney-at-law
the hapless victim into the water.
Quicker than a terrier worrying a Hermiston
lit
rat the terrible Jaws follow up the
blow, and before the luckless prey
DR. A. E. MARBLE
quite realizes what has happened the
great teeth crush through flesh and
Chiropractor
bone and all Is over.
I Treat both Acute and Chronic Dis­
Many white men have been caught
that way, and no experienced bush- eases.
Office across street from Hurly’e
man will walk alongside or camp close
to a creek or waterhole, no matter grocery.
Phone 4ftl
| how enticing the place may seem. At
1 night the hungry brutes are apt to Office Hours, 10 to 12; 1:30 to ft.
leave the water, and tt would be a
Hermiston, Oregon.
terrible awakening to feel the grip of
those savage Jaws as they closed on
h s. M c K e n z i e , x d -
one's body and dragged one off to a
Eye. Ear. Nose and Throat
hideous death.—Exchange.
Office: 1-2-3 Inland Empire Bldg.
Pendleton, Oregon
w. j. m m
Modern Rendering of
“Hickory, Dickory, Dock”
"Keeping time, time, time, in a
rhunic sort of rhyme.” . . • Thus the
Bells, Bells, Bells. And the lock,
tock, lock of the electric-driven clock
' keeps time, time, time witli Its chyme,
chyme, chyme. You may listen to Its
tick when the night is extra thick, and
know Its little hand is the same
throughout the land, for Its motor-
made precision only has one w’akeful
mission . . . to keep the second, min­
ute, hour, In a universal sameness,
without a spell of lameness, on mantel
piece and tower. So the tick and the
tock of the motor-driven clock Is the
universal same as It s read from block
to block.
And here is the sure, Irrevocable
morale, with which all other timers re­
fuse to make quarrel: “Spin on, spin
on, oh time In thy flight, and set me
aright once again for tonight.”—Ex­
change.
P a s te u r iz e d M ilk is S a f e M ilk
MILK, 10 CENTS QUART
SWEET WHIPPING CREAM, 30 CENTS PINT
WE DELIVER
PHONE 852
H erm iston Cream ery Co.
E. W. WEST, PROP.
Full Weight Honest Test
Prompt Pay
ATTEND 0. A. C. IN 1927
Corvallis, Oregon— The annual re­
port of the registrar, E. B. Lemon,
shows that out of a total enrollment
of 3818 long term students at Oregon
State Agricultural college in the
school year 1927-28, Umatilla county
was represented by 106. Total en­
rollment for the year. Including the
1927 summer session and various
short courses reached 5311 as com­
pared with 5087 for the previous
year.
Every county In the state as well
as 25 other states were represented
In the total. Students were also in
Corvallis from five foreign countries
— China, India. Canada, Russia and
Korea, and from Alaska, the Phlllltp-
s, Hawaii and the District of
Columbia. The latest report from
this year’s summer sessions shows
students from all but four counties of
Oregon and 19 other states. Total
registration is 1385 Including special
and junior session students and 707
regular adult students. Of the lat­
ter 11 are from Umatilla county.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
JAMES L. SEARS, X. D.
Physician and Surgeon
Offles Phone 733.
Ree. Phone T i l
Office in First National Bank Bldg.
HEART DISEASE
If there's pressure on the heart nerves
Right where they leave the spine;
Then the heart will cause you trouble
'Til the pressure's off the line!
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 311
HERMISTON, OREGON
— — — ——
New Breed
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■J
Dorothy had always wanted a dog. ■ I F
I T ’ S A JO B O P
and at Inst a kind and sympathetic
uncle gave her one.
There was a certain amount of dis­
cussion among tlie family with regard
to the animal's breed. The uncle de
clnred tlie dog wns an alrednie.
Meeting a friend of her father one I CALL US TO DO THE WORK
evening while taking her pet for a !
FOR YOU
walk, Dorothy had an anxious mo
went.
We Have the Trucks and
“Whatever Is It7" the other had i
j Experienced Men te Handle th s
asked. “A pup, Dorothy? What kind
my dear?"
i
Buiiness.
The little girl tried hard to remem­
!
ber what her uncle had said.
i WE CAN FIGURE WITH YOU
“He's a ne'er-do-well," site replied,
after a long pause.
j
ON LONG HAULS
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
106 FROM THIS COUNTY
LODGS HKBHVSS
Where Alligator Liea
in Wait for I ta Prey
i hauling !
■
«
■
g
■
J
a
■
■
Depended on the Gat
It was his first week in the city,
___
an,l Hi« things that interested him
SPECIAL SCHOOL MEETING
”")St were the .„„»„rcycles that
Notice is hereby given to the legal whixzed by, so lie bought a second-
---- of - School District No. i 14
i "'
voters
of hand one and started out. Up one
Umatilla County, State of Oregon, street and down another he went, go­
that a Special School Meeting of said ing faster and faster, and waving to
District will be held at the school the people on tlie streets. They won­
dered, but gul out of the way. Police­
house on the 28th day of July, 1928, | men rushed out and tried to stop him,
at 2 o’clock In the afternoon, for th ; but he kept on. In an hour or so he
following objects: The election of j came to a halt, and an officer stepped
one director to fill vacancy on the np to him. “Why didn't you stop when
board.
I ordered you to?”
Dated this 10th day of July, 1928. j “Stopl” exclaimed the man.
Attest:
R. A. BROWNSON, | wanted to, but didn't know bow!
District Clerk. ' had to go till the gas gave outl"
W. J. WARNER, I
Chairman of Board of Directors, Pro
Tern.
"
------------------------
Remarkable Fellow
Teacher asked the children Indl
vldunlly to name the prominent per-
they would most like to see.
Two Republican Councils Called. 1 son Some
snld the king, others Charlie
Washington, D. C.—Two conferences Chaplin, and many of them mentioned
of western republican national com famous athletes.
mittee men and committee women , After a time, one small boy shouted
were called by Chairman Work, one “Please, miss. I'd rather see my fa
to be held in Chicago and the second, liter's boss.”
••Well,” replied the teacher,
1
to include far-western states, to be
held in San Francisco. The chairman should hardly think one would class
him as a prominent man; hut let us
of the national committee will parti­ bear why you would like to see him."
cipate In both moetings, which will be
“Because,” wna the answer, “I've
arranged to coincide with his trip to j benrd father say that his boss has got
the Pacific coast early In August to at­ , 200 hands."—Montreal Star.
tend the notification of Herbert Hoo­
ver as the republican presidential
Cleaned Up Yellow Fever
nominee.
Tlie Rockefeller foundation In 1910
i H erm iston !
! Transfer ■
I
-
I W AGNER & PA N K 0W
■
l
®
J
s
PORTLAND - PENDLETON
TRUCK LINE
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
REX CAFE
NOW UNDER
NEW MANAGEMENT
OUR HOURS;
Prom 6 A. M. till 9 P. M.
Seven Dayi a Week
Your patronage w ill be appre­
ciated.
TO HOLDERS OF
Third
Liberty Loan Bonds
T h e T re a s u ry offer« a naw
3*£ P " r c tn < ’
y a *f
T re a s u ry bond In axchanaa
for Third Liberty Loan Bond«.
Io the County Court of the State of
dispatched s commission to Guayaquil
Oregon for Umatilla County
Indian Congress Held In Prineville to confer with local and national offl
T h a n aw bonds w i l l b ear
In the Matter of the Estate
d ais
to aaw
active
Prineville, Or.—For three days, be Cia
is r relative
e m in e
wvw measures
interest from July !$♦ 1929.
of
ginning Tuesday, Indian orators from I „gainst the yellow fever plague, A
In t a r a a t on T h i r d L ib e r t y
Ida Belle Parrish, Deceased.
the various tribes of the northwest 1 prn,Misul was made in 1918. Thlr wns
Loan Bonds surrendered for
Notice Is hereby given that the addressed an audience of Inalans on accepted later by the Kcudorlsn offl
exchange will be paid In full
cìh
I
s
and
the
propaganda
was
started
to September 15, 192S.
undersigned has been apolnted ad­ matters of vital importance to the wel
ministrator of the estate of Ida fare of tbs redmen of ths country at shortly thereafter. The story has been
Holder« should consult their
told by scientists »hut a bucket and
banks at once for fu rth e r de­
Belle Parrish, deceased, and has the Indian congress
Ihrst of
o. .v
and ,, w„ ,
congress, the first
Its
tails of this offering.
qualified as the law directs. All per­ kind In Oregon, which le being h
i
(|l||e wh<>11 , hey «leaned
sons having claims against ssld es- at Prineville unde» the auspices ol .
Third Liberty Loan Bor.da
an(| drained tjie stagnant pools on
tts ar« required to present the same Crook County post No. 23, American
(|,e d)rP<.t|„n of Onerai Oorgae.
rr. tture on Septem ber 15,
to me at th« office of W. J. Warner, Legion.
1728, and will ceaM to
my attorney, in Hermiston, Oregon,
tk ar interest on that data.
Notte
ana
Power
with proper vouchers within six Hughes Nominated for World Court
An engine that expends all Its steam
months from the date hereof.
Cenava.—Sweden placed the name In whistling lias nothing left with
A. W . M E L L O N ,
Dated this 12th day of July. 1928.
of Charle. Svan. Hughe, In, nom ina ( -
(b# w lieelr And tlie
i K H t u y of the Ttteeury.
RAYMOND E PARRISH.
tion as successor to Dr. John Havasu ,
pr|ncl(>,«
principle can M
be applied to man.
Washington, Jely J. 1038.
Administrator. Moore on the world court of lateras
Alt ihn» we can save In «->t»e we can ■
45-5to
In power.—Grit.
w l »...
Coital Ju»Uco.
_