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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1929)
HEBM ISTOa • * _____ * ♦ ♦ ( From School of Home O. S. A. C.) < »»♦eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Investment in Pearls Brought Rich Return H BEING YOURSELF • HOME POINTERS Economic* A deHclous icing for a layer cake consists ot one pound of confection ers sugar creamed w ith one-half cup of butter, three tablespoonsfuls of cold coffee, two teaspoonfuls of co coa and one teaspoonful of vanilla «-■ tract. These are mixed thoroughly nd spread on the cake. When baking doughnuuts a small piece of raw potato dropped into the hot fa t w ill prevent the doughnuts from burning. I t is well to have a definite re cipe for meringue, then It w ill seldom it. Two egg whites, h alf teaspoon-, 1 of vanilla extract, four teaspoon- (. 1 of pulverized sugar and a pinch of salt has been found a good re- ipe for this purpose. 'yrups from canned fruits may e kept and blended for m aking jell desserts. They give an uunusual flavor and often a nice color. FOB SALE O il SALE — Home grown Cobbler aaed potatoes $1.60; Goma, $1.25. A. D. Smith. 25-tfc FOR SALE OR E X C H A N G E — 42a of the best soil adjoining the A. D. Smith ranch in B utter creek district. A ll down to alfalfa. See A. D. Smith or address owner, E. E. Van Slyke, Nashua, Iowa. 27-3c FOR SALE— 26 Holstein cows. Andy Anderegg. 27-tfc FOR SALE— Rhode Island Red hatch ing eggs, 50 cents a dozen. Mrs. Joe Dyer. Phone 78-R. 28-tfc FOR SALE— 2 cows, one 3 years old, 1 two years old, freshen in March. Pere Bokish. 28-2tp Some years ago a woman received as one of her Christmas presents a pearl necklace from her husband. Not being In opulent circumstances, he was unable to spend more than $25 for them, but their luster pleased bis wife, however, and for some years she wore them many, many times un til recently the string broke and she carried them to the same Jewelers to be restrung. She had hurdly reached her home when she received a telephone call from the senior partner of the firm who asked her to call the next morn Ing. To her amazement, she found that what she thought were excellent imitations were the real thing and valued at about $5,000. They had been sold by an inexperienced sales man, It appeared. Leaving the Jewels she returned home and several days later was the recipient of a letter from the Jewel ers containing a check for $1,000 and a box containing another string of pearls worth three or four times as much as the original price paid for her first necklace.—Springfield Union. First Eaglisb Bible John Wycliffe, first man to translate the Bible into English, was sixty years old when he finished his task The work belongs to the final period of his life, that time during which he was greatly persecuted by both the church and state. The Wycliffe version was addressed to the entire English people, high and low, rich and poor. This Is proved by the char acter of the copies that have survived. About thirty of these remain and some are large folio volumes, hand somely written and illustrated In the best style of the period. Others are plain copies of ordinary size for pri vate persons or monastic libraries.— Detroit News. Beryllium The bureau of mines says that beryllium Is a rare metal and Is found In considerable quantity only In one mineral—beryl, which contains only at the most about 5 per cent of ber yllium. The process of extracting the metal Is expensive and difficult At present It Is quoted at about $200 per pound. There Is no market except for experimental purposes. I f there were a definite market it Is possible that It could be made for $15 or less per pound. It Is not magnetic. It Is a fair conductor of electricity, and Is not stronger than good steel. As It Is easily oxidized by heat. It would be difficult to cast «8CELLAJIEOU9 Hermiston Seeond Hand Store. - ' FnrnR-ure and Hardware, Harneas, Saddles,' Wagons. 11-tfc Read The W a n t Ads— I t Pays FO I R E N T — Modern house. H erald office. Inquire 25-tfp IN S U R A N C E — Fire, Life, Auto— " In sure in sure insurance.” J. M. Biggs. FO R SALE— Farm Implements. In quire B. J. Nation. 26-i.fc FO U ND— 30x4.50 tire and rim. Ow ner can have same by prowl ng property and paying for this ad. Inquire at Herald office. 28-tfc W A N T E D — An A No. 1 young woman for housework and cooking in fam ily of 5 adults. W rite or call on Mrs. G. M. Rice, Pendleton, Ore. 28-3tc N O T IC E —-S T R A Y E D FROM OUR ranch Saturday, March 9, one buckskin mare w eight about 1100, one black mare w eight about 1300 branded w ith C, one-half circle under rig h t shoulder. Any lig h t leading to th e ir recovery w ill be gladly received. N o tify C. C. Cline- em lth. 28-2tc The Herald Want Ads. Modern Methods Muddlecomlie was one of the very latest model villages, and all the nouses were brand new. A prospective resident was being shown over n small “Old-world cot tage” she hoped to buy by a very enthusiastic estate agent. "But where is the kitchen?” asked the wonmn, after making a tour of the place. The estate agent consulted his plan of the first floor. Then he looked up quickly. “Oh, yon provide that yourself 1“ he answered blandly. “Any really good shop will sell you a combination kitchenette and dining table.” Ambergris Loses io Volao While ambergris la still quite val uable, it does not possess the valut it did years ago. There ia not the demand now fur It that there used to be. Ambergris was chiefly used in the perfume-making industry, some of the most fragrant odors being produced from the evil-smelling stuff; but the advances of synthetic chemistry In re cent years have not only made It poe silile for chemists to Imitate exactly the composition of the compound, but also to produce artificially other and better ammas at the one hundredth part of the cost of umhergria. A pinch of soda in the m ilk when m aking cream of tomato soup usually prevents curdling. By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Deaa of Mea, University of lUioois. I suppose wo are all more or less Imitators. We have our secret heroes whose exploltsand accomplishments and p a r t ic u la r methods and man ners we try to re produce In our play u p o n the stage of life, and we have poluted out to ua by our mothers and our w i v e s examples which It would be good for us to follow and models which we would do well to copy. Bill Thompson was the model which mother selected fbr my ideal of con duct and accomplishment If I could only be as good a boy as Bill was all would be well with me In this world and the next I f I could do my work a3 carefully and conscientiously ns he did snccess would reward my efforts, and the way in which he helped Ills mother about the house wns gratify ing to all the neighbors. Bill and I never got on well together. I disliked him from the start and profited very little, I am afraid, from his noble ex ample. Nancy has pointed out to me often what wonderful manners Seth Tuylor has— how carefnl he Is with his teeth and his finger nails. They simply gilt ter with the high polish which con stant attention gives them. And he Is one of the most thoughtful and tact- ful men she has ever met. He doesn’t make mach of a hit with me in spite of his slick appearance. I ran onto Chester when I wns out West a few weeks ago, and we got to talking about his uncle who Is a professor in one of the eastern col leges now—psychology or sociology ot psychiatry he professes. The uncle has been abroad some and studied for a while in New England. He was horn in Ludlow or Fisher or some near-by Illinois village and ran across Hie prairies bare-footed like the rest of us. He used as much slang and hnri grammar as any other native born and flattened his a's beautifully; hut he picked up a wonderful manner and exaggerated New England pronuncla tion somewhere and Is now no more like himself than Lindbergh Is like Charlie Chaplin. He's a Joke to any one who knew him when he was a boy, for his manner and his pronund atlon and his assumed erudition nre n disguise which tends to bide his real self. I t ’s a mistake to try to be anyone else or to Imitate anyone else. The great men of the world, no matter how little the world Is In which they do their work, have been Individual. They have gone at things in their own particular way. They hnve noi tried to stifle their own personality or to camouflage it by pretending to be something that they are not I met Jimmy Dawson last May. Irish Jimmy is, with a sense of humor. He’s been everywhere in the world since I last saw him thirty years ago. He's met great men In ail countries; ha’s a great man himself—rich and In fluential, but he’s still si heart the same hearty, natural, unaffected Irish man I knew when he was a lad. He’s himself. ( C . l i s t , Wsstara Nswspopor D o ta l.) HERJLLdÜ, -¿UiAtAiTSTöN, OREGON. FACTS ABOUT THE TELEPHONE There are now five private tele phone companies operating in Italy. Great B rita in now has telephone communication w ith eighteen foreign countries. More than 1,000,000 telephone calls are made in the city of San Francisco every tw enty-four hours. Eighteen telephone cables have been placed in the Pennsylvania tube under the N orth River, New York City, since January. 1914. An average of 920,000 telephone calls including over 9000 toll and long distance calls, are made every tw enty-four hours in the city of Pittsburgh. The 600,000th telephone was re cently installed in the London tele phone area which has more than one-third of the total telephones in Great B rita in and Ireland. From 8,000 to 10,000 telephone calls are handled In two hours every working day at the Fordson offices of the Ford Motor company. The peak telephone loads are between 9 and 10 A. M. and 2 to 3 P. M. • W e w ant them to learn aa they grow up, th at thia bank la the rig h t place for them to come when they transact any financial m at ters. Our .advice In any problem« which may arise about th eir savings account w ill be aa fu lly and as carefully given aa In m at ters Involving many dollars. Bring your boy In and introduce him to the fellows. First National Bank 1. B. Sway», Prêt R A. X. Nortea, CaaUar Osee LODOi IHK ECT'JKl -Oy/ 5 I er A total of 99,000 miles of tele phone w ire were added to the Bell Rome M o ffitt and Rose E. M o ffitt, husband and w ife; M. Ralph Evanp system in the state of Wisconsin dur and Mrs. M. Ralph Evans, his wife; ing 1928. This brigs the total mile Hermiston N ational Farm Loan As age w ith in the state up to 1,225,000 sociation, a corporation: P. P. Sul miles. livan, B. S. Kingsley; Oregon Co operative Hay Growers, Defendants. J. W . Turton of Miles, Mich., has Summons. Equity No. 4651. driven the three Ford automobiles he To M. Ralph Evans and Mrs. M. has owned a distance equal to nine Ralph Evans, his w ife, of the above times around the world, has never named defendants: been out of gas,oil or water and has IN T H E N A M E OF T H E STATE never had an accident. He purchased OF OREGON hlB first Ford, a touring car, in 1915, You are hereby required to appear drove it 103,200 miles and then sold and answer the complaint filed it for $125 cash. against you in the above entitled court and cause w ith in four weeks Pirates Sign New Trainer from the date of the first publica tion of this summons, and if you fail to so appear and answer, for want thereof, p la in tiff w ill apply to said court for the relief prayed for and demanded in its complaint on file in the above entitled m atter, to-w it: For Judgment and decree of said court against the defendants Rome M o ffitt and Rose E. M o ffitt, hus band and wife, M. Ralph Evans, and Hermiston National Farm Loan As sociation, a corporation, and each of them, for the sum of $71.50, with interest thereon at the rate of 8 pel cent per annum since the 14th day of January, 1928, u n til paid, the fu r ther sum of $71.50, w ith Interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent per annum since the 14th day of July. 1928, u n til paid, the fu rth er sum oi $2,046.09, w ith interest thereon at the rate of 5 U per cent per annum since the 14th day of July, 1928. Mike t ’hninl.ers, formerly of the u n til paid, and the fu rth er sum of University of Iowa and Ohio Stute $20.71, w ith Interest thereon at the university, who has been signed as rate of 8 per cent per annum since trainer of the Pittsburgh Pirates, of the 3rd day of October, 1928, u ntil the National Basehnll league. paid, and for any sum or Bums paid by p la in tiff in. the payment of de linquent taxes due and owing on said land subsequent to the filin g of said suit and prior to the entry of decree, together w ith interest there on at the rate of 8 per cent per an num from the date of said payment, and for the fu rth er sum of $15.00, w ith interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 5th day of November, 1928, u n til paid, and and which said mortgage is dated the 14th day of July, 1922, and was thereafter, to-w it, on the 27th day of July, 1922, duly recorded in the of- fee of the County Recorder of Uma tilla County, Oregon, in book 76, on page 288, of the Records of Real Es tate Mortgages of U m atilla County, Oregon, and that the proceeds of said sale be applied in satisfaction of said sums, attorneys' fees, interest, costs and disbursements, and for a decree further providing that any party to this suit may bid upon and purchase said land at the sale thereof, and th at i f p la in tiff falls to realize enough from the sale of said prem ises to satisfy p la in tiff’s decree, that the p la in tiff have judgment against the above named defendants, Rome M o ffitt and Rose E. M o ffitt, husband and wife, M. Ralph Evans, and H er miston N ational Farm Loan Associa tion, a corporation, for any portion of said decree remaining unpaid, and that all of the defendants hereinabove named be forever foreclosed and barr ed of any and all right, title, claim, lien or Interest in or to said premises hereinabove and in said mortgage described, except the rig h t of re demption, which said defendants have under the laws of the State of Oregon, and for such other and fu r ther relief as it may appear to the court th at equity and the nature of laid suit may require. V IN E Y A R D LODGE NO. 206, L O. 0 P. meets each Monday evening in Odd Fellows' ball. Visitin g members cur- dlally invited. W . R. Longhorn, Secretary. Gwynn Hughea, N. O. HERMISTON POST NO. 37 Meets first and th ird Thurs day. Legion A u xilia ry meets second and fourth Thursday Legion H all. PROFESSIONAL CARDS A. 0. R0ENICKE, D. M. D. associated w ith F. V. PRIME. D. M. D General Dentistry X -R ay and Diagnosis Bank Building Phone Connections Sundays and Evenings by apelnt- ment. W J . W A K N E fi Attorney-nt-Law Hermiston Oregon DR. A. E. MARBLE Chiropractor I Treat both Acute and Chronic Dis eases. Office across street frem H u rly s grocery. Phone 481 Office Hours, 10 to 12; l: 3 o to 6. Hermiston, Oregon. h s M c K enzie , m . d Eye. Ear- Nose and Throat Office: 1-2-3 inland Empire Pendleion, Oregon Bldg JAMES L. SEARS, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office Phone 733. Res. Phone 71$ Office in First National Bank Bldg PEANN FUNERAL SERVICE Telephone 801 N ig h t or Daay CHAPEL, FUNERAL COACH AND SANITARY PREPARATION ROOM Ambulance Service Herm iston Avenue R A D IO ¿epulring S E R V IC E Testing Bosch Raidos Paul Miller Phone 4C-W-2 W. H. McMILLAN Licensed Electrician Wiring - Contracting Hermiston, Oregon That this summons is served upon you by publication thereof once a week for four successive weeks in the Hermiston Herald by order of the B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B I Hon. James Alger Fee, Judge of the above entitled court, which said or der was made and dated the 11th day of Februray, 1929, and th at the 206 East Coart St. | date of the firs t publication of this ■ ANY AND 5 summons is the 14 th day of Febru ary, 1929. R A L E Y , R A L E Y ft W A R N E R , ■ ' JOHN F. K IL K E N N Y . s Postoffice Address, Pendleton, Oregon R. J. VENA BLES, FOR YOU : J. B. R YA N , p . L. VAUGHANS Everthing Electrical B Postoffice Address, Spokane, Wash a Phone 139 Pendleton, Ore. _ ington. Attorneys for P lain tiff. ‘i B I B B B B I I I i e i a i B g a ä 24-5tc W E R EPA IR WE HAVE THE EQUIPMENT È SHOES ■■■■BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB B TO FIX RADIATORS COLUMBIA THEATER « FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY AND USE MODERN MAHCINERY AND HERMISTON ,0RE. THE BEST OF MATERIALS. Saturday and Sunday, March 16-17 WE WELCOME THE CHILDREN AT THIS BANK _ .for the fu rth er gum of $2.50, togeth w ith interest thereon a t the ' ~ 1 rate of 8 per cent per annum from A p h ilo s o p h e r s a y s tne 13th day of November, 1928 that one bint to tie In u ntil paid, and the fu rth er sum of business with a man or in love with a $200.00 as attorney’s fees, and for woman In order to plain tiff's costs and disbursements in said suit, and th at the sum of know that he doesn't know them. $110.00, stock in plain tiff's bank, held in trust by said bank for the Present» of Mind defendant Hermiston National Farm The small son of the house had Just Loan Association, a corporation, be Informed his parents that lie hud been cancelled, and that the proceeds dreaming during the night. thereof be applied to the satisfact "Well, and what did yon dieam ion of p la in tiff’s decree, and that -ihoul?” asked his father. ”1 dreamt that you gave me a ped the mortgage described herein and in iillng motor car, daddy,” begun the plaiutlff'g complaint be foreclosed small boy, “and mother gave me a anti the mortgaged premises, des box ot soldiers.” - cribed therein and hereinafter des "But you know, dear, that dreams cribed, be sold in one parcel as pro always mean the opposite.” vided under the statutes and laws of “Oh, yes I” The youngster wns un the State of Oregon, to -w it: dismayed. “But, then, I shall get the The Northeast Quarter of the soldiers from you, an’ mummie'll give Southwest Quarter of the N orth me the motor,” east Q uarter and that portion of the South H a lf of the Southwest IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE Quarter of the Northeast Quartet STATE OF OREGON FOR UMA lying East of the county road, all TILLA COUNTY. being in Section 14 in Township The Federal Land Bank ot Spokane, a 4 North of Range 28 East of W il corporation. P la in tiff, lamette M eridian, in Um atilla County, Oregon, vs. F ath e r JACK LONDON'S “Burning Daylight” WITH MILTON S H IS AND DORIS KENYOU He made a million dollars in Alaska, and lost it! He made three millions in Saa Francissco, and lost it! Then back to Alaska where he found a great love, and held it, as only a bred-in-the- north he-man know» how! Also concluding chapter of the "Mark of The Frog” GOOD COMEDY K neer’s R epair Shop ■ YOU ARE ASSURED OF THE ■ ,1 ( 111, 11 ■ 11P■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ BEST OF SERVICE IN OUR SHOP. “»yilATS G O O D ENOUGH fO R C H A M PIO N S - IO GOOD ENOUGH VOR ME That's what one e f our customers »aid the other day when he came in and bought a whole set o il Tfreitene C u m -D ip p ra Tims. Theo« U rrshoU aB world r» « rd « for endm»- •nca »weed. snd » •f t t f - 30,000 mil«« I" 26,326 m inutes! 2073 mile» pee hour! ► """ «”• •» * • 77 ,,nur’ 10 Every on» of th a w record« snd hundred» more were made on rire .lo n c . On rsee trs e h s -u r an the open rood -they .how whsl supreme mileage, «tremrth, and economy they can deh»e» , on any typo of t v . Come in and let ua «how you why G u m - \ Dipping makes ^ T k e a t h a U - e e . i 4 Black & White Garage J, G. PFALSON, MANAGER BOWMAN SHOE SHOP R EA D T H E HOME PAPER We Want Yon to keep in mind the fact that in addition to printing tjiis news paper we do job work of any kind. When in need of anything in this line be sure To S ee Us