The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, September 19, 1929, Image 3

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    1 « o HER n SEE , doctors
mice •
«FTBI48 TEARS
1 BREATHES EASY
SOUTH AMERICA
nuuin AflKMM
♦
Settlement o f Tacna Dispute
Ends Fifty-Y ear
I W
W a r T h re a t
Whole World la Miracle to Mrs.
Betty Ann Wagoner After
Successful Operation.
HCTMi3TX)K 'nmt4^». «wmawoy. oangoy.
H E R M IS T O N
♦
LOCAL NEWS ITEMS
IR R IG A T IO N
D IS­
T R IC T NO TICE
*
Notice Is hereby given that the
board of directors of the Hermiston
Irrig atio n
D istrict, acting as a
.Mrs. Sullivan Improving.
Mrs. P. P, Sullivan, who is in a board of equalization, w ill meet at
iPortland hospital, is reported to be tbe office of the secretary in lle r-
mlston, Oregon, on tike first Tues­
much Improved.
day in October, 1929 at 8 P. M., for
the purpose of reviewing and cor-
At the W. W. Felthouse Home.
M r. and Mrs. Oron Felthouse and
Mr. Ilalp b G albraith of Portland were
dinner guests at the W . W . Felthouse
Tuesday In September, 1929.
home Sunday.
♦
New Orleans, La.—The whole world
la a miracle to Mrs. Betty Ann Wag­
oner from her bed In a charity hoe-
Santiago,
Clille.—The
announce­ pltal ward. After 48 year« Mra. Wag­
ment of the settlement of the long oner can see.
There are only two things Mra.
standing boundary dispute over Tacna
and Aries, often called the Alsuee- Wagoner wants that she hasn't got
l-orralne of South America, ends a The first Is to see her son and tbe
fifty year threat of war that ninny second la to learn to read.
Sira. Wagoner was born Wind In Returns Home.
times has Imperiled the pence of South
A lbert Kennings, who has boen
Montgomery, Ala., 48 year« ago. When
America.
away
during the summer, returned
she
married
she
moved
to
Colfax.
The dispute had Its beginning In
the war of the Pacific, or the nitrate Iowa, where she has lived slece. Five i home recenlty to attend high school,
months ago Mrs, Wagoner became III i
-
w a r, as It is more bitterly culled
and came to a cbarlty hospital for a Hew Bicycle.
■which begun In 187» when Chile In
mlnne
_ . ___
minor Ai-aMtllon
operation.
raded the Bolivian province of Ata
E arl Watson Is the proud possessor
While she was there surgeons ex­ of a new bicycle.
caraa on the pretext of broken treaty
amined her eyes and became con­
rights.
Prior to thia war much Chilean cap­ vinced that unless the muscles had
ital wna Invested in the nitrate plant» atrophied from year« of disuse Mrs. I“ “ •
Wagoner could be made to see.
| M ile Fannie Todd, teacher in Col-
of Atacama, hut Chile never vigor
Tlie operation was tried on her right umbia school, was confined to her
ously pressed Its doubtful claim to
the province as long as Bolivia did eye. Several days ago tbe bandages ¡home by Illness, two days last week,
were removed.
|
______
not attempt to tax Chilean capital In
“I clenched my hands and tried not A t P o rtla M Hospital.
vested there.
Whether, as charged by Chile, fot to scream," Mrs. Wagoner said.
Mra. Jasper Templeton, who re ­
the purpose of Inciting war or for “Then I opened my eyes and I saw cently underwent an operation In a
revenue, Bolivia broke Its treaty with the doctor's face. It was too wonder­ Portland hospital, is reported to be
ful."
Chile and began taxing Chilean nl
improving.
The operation wna repeated on Mrs.
trate Interests.
Wlthont waiting
declare war Chile seized the city of Wagoner's left eye, but the bandages
have not yet been removed.
Antofagasta.
Portland Visitor.
“ I stand nt the window,” continued
Ralph G albraith of Portland
is
Chile Wins.
Mrs. Wagoner, “and I see automobile visiting over the week-end at the O.
Two weeks later Bolivia formally
declared war and called upon Peru to wheels turning and smoke coming out O. Felthouse home.
assist her. The Chileans charge that of chimneys and people walking
Bolivia and Peru had an offensive and around and 1 can't believe IL Think Sunday Visitors.
defensive treaty aguinsl Chile. The of seeing my son."
M r. and Mrs. J. D. W aghorn spent
lle r nurses tell her what things are.
war ended In 1881 when Chilean troops
“ 1 would ask what la the long-point­ Sunday at the W ill Logan home.
seized the city of Lima.
The treaty of Ancon was signed In ed thing oul there, and the- nurse
1881. Bolivia handed over Io Chile would say: ‘That’s a church steeple? To Pendleton.
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Watson were
the province of Atacmna, and thereby I've been going to church all my life
Pendleton shoppers Saturday even-
lost Its entire seaboard und a world and didn't know a church steeple.'
n)ono|M>l.y of nitrate of soda.
Pent
ng.
ceded the province of Tarapnca and Dies of Oxygen Need
banded over Tacnn and Arlca fot ten
on Giant India Peak Attends Show.
years, when a plebiscite was to have
M r. and Mrs. Curtis Smons and
been held.
•
Calcutta, India.— Edgar Farmer, an
The plebiscite was never held, as employee of the Standard Oil Com­ Mr. and Mrs. Dave M lttlesdorf a t­
the Peruvians will explain, because pany of New York, was killed while tended the show at Pendleton Thurs­
Chile feared she would not win, and. attempting to reach the summit of day evening.
as the Chileans will explain, because Mount Klnchlnjunga, a peak In the
Peru believed she would lose.
Himalayan, 27.81.1 feet high, one of Boardman Visitor,
The fact of the matter Is. the plehl
the highest In the world.
I Mra. Jack-Gorham nnd children of
•cite was never held for the very
Mr. Farmer came to India six i Boardman were in town Saturday.
good reason that Chile fought two on
months ago on a leave, working ont '
______
tlons In 187» to obtain the province, part of his passage on a cargo boat. i _
.. _
and as long as the veterans of that
fie started on the expedition on April -
Mrs. W . H. Hannan of Columbia
war dominated the polities of the na
27 from Darjeeling In Bengal, accom­
tlon she stood ready every minute to panied h.v ten coolies who had re­ district entertained at a party Friday
fight again to hold It.
ceived nipiiiihdn training with the in honor of her daughter Marda. Miss
Everest expedition.
He made his Hannan intends leaving for H o lly­
Matter of History.
fomth rump with them at an altilnde wood Secretarial school in Califor-
Like the veterans of the American
Civil war, the veterans have now of 22.(8«i feel nnd went on alone to n ; nla In the near future,
passed from the political picture, and height where oxygen 1» needed, hut
for several years Tacna and Arlca lias lie hud none. His followers saw him Umatilla Visitor Here Thursday.
been only a matter of the history mnke a fifth camp In a s ik . u cave,
Mrs. Ben Spencer of’ U m atilla was
books for the present generation of where lie slept despite the dunser of In Hermiston shopping Thursday.
fidlinc
In
The
next
nioroQtg
they
Chileans. Thus It was that the way
was pav-d for the announcement of snw him ellruli to an altitude of 2.‘ .(«X>
feel mid soddenlv disap,»ear over a
the present settlement.
rid;:". They walled four dnya for his
In recent years the disputed prov
Ince has been a convenient tool for return and then returned to Darjee­
ling.
polltlcla.is.
I f President l.cgtiln he
Mr. Farmer, who was twanty-four.
enme Involved In Internal dissension
he had only Io raise tfle question of did not make hla trip tinder the aus­
pices of a Himalayan club or any
Tacnn and Arlca to divert public at
other responsible organization.
His
tentlon.
Likewise, In Clille. when the army mother lives In Florida and hla wife
In New York.
was going to revolt In 1920 the poll
tlclans raised the cry of war with
Peru and rushed 20. (MX) soldiers Io the Petri« Society’« Dogs
northern frontier to defend the nn
Now Have Special Tea
tlon against a mythical army of theli
Paris.—The parties of petted ca­
own fabrication.
Although Bolivia was left nut In the nines provide smart Paris With Its
cold In the present settlement, there latest fad of diversion.
Miss Florence Walton, Amerlrnn
la no doubt that she has not given up
lancer, rellred from the stage Io h
her holies for nn outlet to the sen
and many persons believe that Peru modest modiste’s shop In the most
will sell her share of .the settlement aristocratic shopping center Of Paris,
to Bolivia nfler the completion of the introduced dogs’ tens for her prized
port. The province Is worth little o» Pekinese “Chin Chin” and now all
nothing f Peru, outside of tlie honor smart Paris Is entertaining dogs.
U B E R A L »T O P O V E R S
Involved.
Miss Walton served tea for "Chin
By the treaty of lUtlS Bolivia waived ('bin” nnd Invited Mile. Ceclle Morel's
chow “Choctaw." Princess Faucille
all claims against Chile upon the Int
Lntonr's great dane “Luxury" and the
ter’s promise to build the Arlca lai
Pas railroad and i i |a i u the imyinenl ol
ftiur-lcgged pets of a dozen other
F. C. W O U G H T E R ,
a large Indemnity. This treaty was women high In Paris society and
definitely discharged Inst year when stage life.
Chile turned over the Bolivian section
While the dogs sit on velvet cush­
of the railroad to Bolivia.
ions and eat tasty cakes or lap up
While It Is pointed oat In some ten tinted milk, their mistresses sit
quarters here that the United States in an ndjoinlng salon and play bridge.
I bigs' tens were to have been expect­
mid Great Britain could never hare
affonled h iieriuit Chile anil Pern to ed. for It Is years since Paris bad Its
go to war. all South America hue first dogs’ bars.
breathed a sigh of relief over the
The dogs' bars are generally ont
settlement, because the province was side some of the most famous Ameri­
long a pntenflnl tinder box of nn al1 can bars of the capltnl. and consist
South A l l t e l Ion conlhigrnllnn.
>f a fountain where water Is the only ,
fluid available.
W. J. W A R N E R .
F2-6te
Secretary.
N O T IC E OF SALE
Notice s hereby given that by vir-1
tue of the authority of the City Char­
ter of the C ity of Hermiston and the
direction of the City Council author-
izing and directing the Treasurer of
the City of Hermiston to collect the
|
j
19
20
23
24
29
30
8
9
14
9
10
12
13
14
15
1
2
8
3
4
3
4
5
u tu i 1.- i
.at B.
10 W . vV„ll!«ley .............
10 W . T . lllsley .............
10 O
R> 1 c r ............
10 O. ?. Ryder................
10 H a rry Rcdgera ...........
10 H arry Rodgers ...........
1 F. C. cKeazie.............
1 F. C. McKuuzi«...........
1 Ceoige Baucroft ........
2 !’ u.is. G. B u r k ...........
2 City of Hermiston....
2 Chas. G. B u rk.............
2 Chas. G. Burk
61.70
61.70
53.82
6 3 *2
61.70
61.70
35.84
33.23
60.40
36.26
30.34
28.61
28 61
29.48
2 Sannt rs In c.................
36.34
f,6 56
4 F. W M illin e r
4 F. W . M lilln e r ........... 73.60
4 Keren Jensen ............. . 5.96
5 A. A. L ittle ...............
29.48
6 Anns Strohm .............
28.61
6 C. B. Lomax .............
21.00
6 Julius Lund ........
31.50
6 ’ ’¡I'es Lund
............ 3 Î.3 7
W . L. H A M M ,
City Treasurer.
__ _ _ _
______ ____.
01
2 *T‘ «„C0J? B T 0 F
STA TE OF OREGON FOR
unpaid assessment levied upon th e '
U M A T IL L A CO UN TY.
land embraced In Improvement DIs-
x . ..
. „ .
,
.
. I I h . Patter.-on, t>s Gover-
tric t No. 10 for Improving Gladys'
,
_
,
. j < ... u .
..
.¡n o r of the State of Ore-
Avenue in said City between the east
gon, H al 11 oss, .is Secre­
llne of F irst street and the West line
tary of State of said State,
of Seventh street, levied and improv­
and Thomas B. Kuy, as
ed under the provisions of Ordinance
State Treasurer of said
No. 120 passed by the C ity Council
State, composing a board
and approved by the Mayor on Aug-j
of Commissioners for the
ust 5, 1925.
sale of State lands of said
I w ill on the 14th day of October,
State, and for the invest­
1929, at the hour of 10 o'clock In the
ment of funds arising
forenoon of said day at the City
therefrom,
under the SUMMONS
Council Chamber in the City of H er­
name
and
style
of
Equity
miston, Oregon, sell the following
“ STA TE L A N D BOARD,” No. 4708.
described lots, pieces and parcels of
P la in tiff,
lend at public auction to the high­
vs.
est bidder for cash in hand, the pro­
F ran k J. Auseon and Eva
ceeds from the sale of each lot. piece
M. Auseon, his w ife; J.
or parcel of land to be applied m sat-
, . ..
...
.
i , A. Campbell and Am elia
hfaction of the assessment upon said _
. ,, . .
- ...............................
... j
... Campbell, his w ife; Mon-
lot, piece or parcel of land w ith In -!
..
M.
Glaspey
roe
and
ttrs t thereon from Sept. 11, 1925, at
M lnta V. Glaspey, his
the rate of 6 per cent per annum to­
w ife; The N ational Pig
gether w ith a penalty of 15 per cent
¡Co., a corporation; H .
qf each of said assessments and all
¡R. W aldo end Mrs. H . R.
costs.
¡Waldo, his w if e and A.
Follow ing is a description of each
York
of said lots, places or parcels of land !
Defendants.
w ith the number of feet frontage,
To: M o n -ie M. Glaspey and M lnta
name of owner or reputed owner, and V. Glaspe;-. his .'-lfe, the above nam­
the amount of sai(| assessments.
ed defendr.i ts.
Name
Amount
Lot Block
IN T H E L A V E OF T H E STATE
Ruth M. Frick ..... ....... 875.23 OF OREGON
75.22
Ruth M F ric k ..... .......
You arc. hereby required to appear
H. R. Newport ... .......
79.36 and answer
the
complaint
filed
73.60 against yon In the above entitled
H . R. Newport ..... .......
71.68 court and a < .',n ¡within 4 xtfeeks
C. I I. Skinner ........
69.76 from the <1 te of the first publica-
C. H . Skinner ..... .......
C. H Skinner
69.76 t.ion of Mi ,
im.")» nnd If vou
K Momma ............ .......
71.68
E. Momma ............ .......
73.60
E. Mtimma ......... .. .......
79.36
'ail to so appear and aa^wei far in p la in tiff's oir.pl-.u
w ant thereof the p la in tiff w ill ap-
(6 )
T hat the ba ¡an-
ply to eaid court for the relief pray-1 paid to the defendt-nt»' ’
d for and demanded in its complaint th eir Interests may a ,
on file In the above entitled m atter,
T h a t the court w ill f i .i i ,
to -w lt:
th at any party to thia suit
For personal Judgment and decree come the purchaser of the
■ygaJpgt the defendants F ra n k
J. any part of the real proper,
Auseon and Eva M. Auseon. his wife: ^sale thereof, to be made o:i
J. A. Campbell and Am elia Camp-
hell, his w ife; Monroe M. Glaspey
and M lnta V. Glaspey. his wife, and
the National Pig Co., a corporation,
for the sum of 84,000, together w ith
interest thereon at the rate of 6 per
cent per annum from the 8th day
of February, 1928, u n til paid; and
for the fu rth er sum of 8300 attorney's
fee and for p la in tiff’s costs and dis­
bursements in this suit; and that
the court w ill fu rth er enter a decree
herein directing and declaring that
said sums are a first and prior lien
upon the real property hereinbefore
and hereinafter described, under and
by virtu e of the terms of p la in tiff’s
mortgage, and further, decreeing that
the claim or Interest of tbe defend­
ants, H . R. W aldo and Mrs. H . R.
Waldo, his wife, Monroe M. Glaspey
and M lnta V. Glaspey, his wife, The
National Pig Co., a corporation an I
A. H. York, or either, are subsequen'
In time and inferior In rig ht
to
p lain tiff's mortgage; and th at the
court w ill enter decree herein fore­
closing said mortgage; and that the
court w ill enter a decree herein fore­
closing said mortgage and direct­
ing that the real property therein
and hereinafter described, to-w lt:
South H a lf
of
the Southwest
Q uarter of Section 2, in Township
4 North Range 28 E. W . M.
together w ith all tenements, hered­
itaments and appurtenances thereto
belonging or In any wise appertain­
ing, be sold in the manner provided
by law for the sale of real property
under mortgage foreclosure, under
execution to be issued under said
execution to be Issued upon said
sale shall be applied as follows, to-
w lt:
(1 )
To the payment of the costs
and expenses of sale and costs and
disbursements of this Biilt.
(2 )
To the payment of all county
and state taxes now assessed against
said property and due and owing
thereon,
(3 )
To the payment to the
p la in tiff of such sum as the court
shall adjudge reasonable as a tto r­
ney's fees herein.
(4 )
To the
payment to the
p la in tiff of such sum as the court
shall find due as interest xnd prln-
clpal upon said note and mortgage
tlon under such decree, and that
• S h eriff shall place the purchrse
such sale into Immediate pose.'»
of the property purchased and,
T h a t tbe court w ill fu rth er de-
cree th a t the defendants »1(4
of them, and all person
or to claim, by. t h ~ v
them or any of them s i r '
barred and force’
title , interest and estate ¿u
in equity, and all equity of r»d»-
lon in and to said
every p art thereof e
such rig h t of redf rapt o
i>e allowed by th"
State of Oregon, and
T h a t the court v l ' l
’
th at If, after applying th ■
said sale to the p a y rte r'
amounts for which plaint
3hall obtain decree and
against said defendants, or
them, of such par’
of said sale as shall -e
pllCable thereto, there shall ’
main a balance unpaid to t*»'-
tiff, then and In t.bo*
p la in tiff shall ton
such unpaid balance upo
cree against any of the
the defendants, Fran
ind Eva M. Auseon, his w
Campbell and Am elia Ca ■ ■ '
wife, Monroe M. Glaspey a
'Pl
V. Glaspey, his w ife, and ' he Na.
lonal Pig Co., a
corporation,
< •
either of them which p la in tiff
discover, and for such o th fr grn-
rellef as to a court of equ’ t - •> •
seem meet and proper In the pre
Ises.
This summons Is served upon vo
by publication thereof once a w e
for 4 successive we^’rs In the D
mlston Herald, by order of the ’ ’ nr
crablc James Alger Fee. Jud -,- i f
the C ircuit Court, of the c tate o
Oregon for U m atilla County, which
said order was made and d ried th ■
3rd day of September, 1979, and t! -
date of the firs t publication of th!--
summons is the 5th day of Septem­
ber. 1929.
H . J. W A R N E R ,
A tto rn ey for P la in tiff.
Postoffice address, Pendleton Oregon,
d -e tc )
HOW El
SPECBAl SUMME» FARES END SEPT. JO*
FINAl RETURN L IM IT O C T O B E R J I ,T
C O I N C A N D R K T O R M IN O
Agent
Hermiston, Oregon
C a lf W ith Tw o Heads
Reported in Wyoming
Glenrock, Wy«.—A freak calf «lib
two beads, four from feet and two
tails was recently Ixirn on the Vlt-loi
laisko ranch near here. The cult died
short ly after birth. With the excep
tlon of tlie two tails the hindquarters
of the animal were uorimtl.
>>00000000
H e’s W ed Al! Right,
But W ho’s His W ife?
Memphis. Tenn. —M atrim onial
problems of IJoyd I*. I ’oweli
have "stuin|ic»r Menipliis inurta
According in Powell, he was
sentenced to prison for lilgann
wlien he wsa not ■ bigamist
He Is legally married to hit sec
ood wife, although he la not
lawfully divvrx-ed from Ids firs«
and « n ’t have his oe-.-iaid mar­
riage annulled until his flrst dl
cores decree la set aside, and It
M t aside be becomes a bigamist
Sweet Tooth of M ale
Is Growing Sweeter '
West Baden Springs, Md.—“Don’t
forget the men," was the advice given
to the candy trade here recently by I - 1
C. Blunt of Denver, president of tbe
National Confectioners’ association, at
the forty-sixth annual convention of
that organization.
“There Is no doubt," said Blunt,
“that the masculine sweet tooth Is
steadily growing sweeter. I f we could
lake a consns of the candy In cnnsttm- ’
era’ hands al this moment, we would
find naist nt It not In tlie boudoir and
tlie shopping hag. hut in the packets
of overalls and golf coats, In the
workingman’s dinner pell and on the j
desk of llie busy executive.”
L m ( Skirt.
New York.—Long skirts have re-
turned to the ballroom, long trousers
to tbe beech, and cotton fabflcs Into
fashion's faver. All of which Indi­
cates that smart society sttH affects
the unusual In Its escape frepi boce-
dom--even If It must retrace the CS|-
i
;
'
Between You and Loss
One of Our Fire Insurance Policies
IM E after time, Richfield has triumphed in competition with prac­
tically every leading brand of gasoline. Exclusive choice of the
country’s leading drivers and pilots, it has won more victories and
world’s records than all other gasolines combined. Its outstanding
qualities—proved in grueling competitive events—are the same qualities
you need in your own car—instant acceleration, power,
sr-’cd and mileage combined,
T
J. M. BIGGS
Phone 51
■
• t i I D IV A Y
*
OK k o v i i v a r d
LA N D .
A IR
OR
I
V A Y I R . . . . R t C N f 111 D
A tW A V I
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