Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1929)
w OREGON STATE NEWS OF GENcRAUNTEREST Celebrating-. EUeh -H44P* ftttaeatfc birthday, Mrju_Henry H it t en tertain ed aix guests w ith * dinner Wednes day night. LOCAI NEWS ITEMS Visit« Parents. Prizes For Turkeys. .Methodist Church. H r". A. B. H in t out of Portend and Regular services w ill be held at her baby, Bobby, are visiting at the the Methodist Episcopal church next George Briggs home. Mr«, ft In ton I Sunday except that there w ill be no came Monday and w ill be here far 10 jpreaching in tbe evening. Sunday Hop picking in all yards near Day- days or more w hile her husband is school w ill be a t 10 o’clock, preach ton was finished last week. supervising the construction of a ing at 11 o’clock, with special music The six-tunnel prune dryer owned bridge at Starbuck. Washington. by the choir, and Epworth League by K. M. Paxton, three miles north at 7 o'clock.. - Baptist Church. west of Salem, was destroyed by fire The Hermiston Baptist church w ill recently. , hold its regular services Sunday Old Clothes Waited. The first snow to fall In southern at 11 o'clock in Odd Fellows hail. Anyone having clothes that are no Oregon this season fell at Crater lake The public is cordially invited. J. longer needed can leave them w ith last week. Old residents look for an iT . Dowell, pastor. Mrs. Rena W aterman or Mrs. Geo. early winter. Newell, who w ill give them to the Albany’s schools opened last week Visits Parents. Mr. and Mrs. H a rry Todd and fam with an enrollment seven In excess of the enrollment on the first school ily from Bend are week end guests of R. C. Todd. day of last year. ------------ Fire which probably started from Says Hoover Doesn’t Eat Peanuts A six-tunnel prune dryer belonging to the Douglas National bank was de stroyed by fire recently, making the third large dryer burned near Rose burg this season. The usual turkeys, two w ill be tbe prizis at the Mrs. If. E. Shesely has returned from Wenatchee, W ashington, where she has been for the past few weeks. For the first time in several years the financial report of the 1S29 Tllla mook county fair, issued by the fair board, shows assets in excess of lla bilitles, with a net proNt of *1373.63 after all bills have been paid. Two shifts, employing about 10 | women and girls, are sorting seed peas at the Weston plant of the Wash || tngton-Idaho Seed company. Peas raised In the Weston vicinity are of good quality and culls are few. TH E M A R K E T * Portland Wheat—Big Bend Hluestem. (1.32; toft white and western white. *1.33; hard winter, northern spring and wen*. era rad, *1.19. H ay—Baying prleea, f. o. b. Port- Alfalfa, *20.60 0 21 per ion; val ley timothy, *19.60 0 *20; eastern Ora gon timothy, »21.60022; clover. *1«; net hay. »17; oats and vetch. *1*. Bntterfat—47062c. ■gg»— Ranch. 32 0 44c. CnttlO—Steers, good. *1 0 5 0 0 1 0 **. Hogs—Good to choice, 99.75011. Uunbo— Good to choice, (1O.M011. •cattle Wheat— Soft White, western white. 01.31 Mb; hard winter, western red and northern spring »1.19^; bloestem, «1.14. Eggs- Ranch. 27 0 43c. Bntterfat—53c. Cattle— Choice steers. *10.25011. H o g s-P rim e 11<M.*]« 90011. Lam he-Choice. *11011.25. •pokara Cattle—Steers, gopd. 39.5*01* 3*. Hogs—Good and choice, 310 6 0 0 «I9 60. J-anha p o le s. »1 00 1*2 *. til 95 cents places one of these beautifnl lamps, either Bridge or Junior, in your home. The balance can be paid in easy payments cf $1.00 per week. 95 Cents Down Fifth Graders Picnic. A group of pupils in the fifth grade who are liv in g in town went on a picnic F riday evening. They were accompanied by th eir teacher, Ann W erry. BRIDGE TABLES, FINISHED AND UNFINISHED Rrnging in price from— $ 1 .3 5 t o $ 4 .5 0 Heir Harry Lauder. 27 PIECE ROSE COLORED BRIDGE TABLE SET S Cups and Saucers, 8 Plates, Center PJate, Cream and Sugar, at Special— Dora Stevens and Ann W erry, both teachers in the schools here, went to Pendleton Tuesday evening to hear H a rry Lauder. $ 6 .4 9 Á . <, W e do but ALSO A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF ARTICLES SUITABLE FOR BRIDGE PRIZES RANGING IN PRICE FROM 50c TO $2.00. one kind o f -- printing — Oregon Hardware & Impi. Co, GOOD PRINTING ■■■■■■■■«■■■■■■■a■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■! Hop picking In most of the W illam ette valley yards was completed dur ing the past week. The crop wrs not a t large as last year and in some ytrds the quality was not up to stan dard. Rhea Luper, state engineer, has de nied the Waplnltia .Irrigation company an extension of time fas which to per fect Its rights to water of Clear and Frog creek and to store 18.000 acre feet of water In Clear lake. Brass plated metal stands, handsomely ornamented. Beautiful Georgette shades hand tailored and hand pleated, trimmed with 6-inch genuine Italian fringe. Horae Again. Two trainloads of pears, totaling 65 ears, were shipped to eastern markets from Medford recently. So far only one car of apples has been shipped. Prune picking for shipping In the Cove district wiU begin within a tew days, but the greater part of the crop will be dried. Prune dryers are being overhauled and fuel hauled ready for tbe harvest of prunes. ■MM—i Paul Mortimor, of Glad stone, ia a guest nt the Cecil W arner home this week end. M rs . Dundee ia becoming quite a busi ness center with four commercial prune driers la operation. The prunes are going around a TO per cent crop there and are ripeniug very slowly. A note against the First Baptist church of Eugene for 112,000 was burned at a public ceremony at tbe church recently. The payment of thia note reduces tbe debt of the church to 1(2,000. B r id g e a n d J u n io r F l o o r L a m p s From Gladstone. C. D. Matsuda Hop company hop houses, kilns and dry room, and their crop of hops, excepting about 100 bales, were burned to the ground re cently at Independence. nt once. LAM PS prixea for young pen pullets and a cockerel, first, second and third fa ir this year. Legion A u xiliary to be sent to the Attends Football Game. child welfare division in Portland. W . J. W arner, eity attorney, a t The clothes arc given to the fam il tended the football game between ies of disabled veterans who are In the University of Oregon and Pacific need of help. University at Eugene Saturday. an overheated furnace destroyed a Elder To Be Here. (A E. Rice of he Spokane and Legion Auxiliary Meets. prune drier owned by Howard and W alla W alla districts Of the Free The Legion A u xiliary met Thurs B. F. Ramp near Brooks. Methodist church w ill begin revival day night at the home of Mrs. Ursel The Deschutes county fair was held services Friday. October 4. in the H ia tt. Mrs. H ia tt and Mrs. Preston September 26 to 28. Tuesday was building form erly occupied by the Hanson were hostesses. Plans were school day, Friday Bend day, Saturday {Hermiston Herald. The meetings completed for the Project F air food Crook and Jefferson county day. w ill culminate In the district quar concession, which is being supervis Reports that many deer perished In terly meeting«, beginning Thursday, ed by Mrs. James Todd and Mrs. the recent forest fires in bane county July 10. ¡George Newell. eeem to be borne out by fact. One man found skeletons of five deer. Materials for the airplane beacon light to be erected at the Kugene mu nicipal airport by tbe department of commerce arrived at the port recently and work was started on the tower » Entertained On Birthday. Principal Events of the Week Assembled for Information of Our Readers. Fire of uhdetermlned origin de stroyed the blacksmith shop and ga rage of Jay Rosaen at Allcel last week. The proprietor’s home nearby was Shved from the flambs after a hard fight. «uv TUM-A-LUM TICKLER. VOL. 1. Herm iatonk Oregon, Oct. 3. 1929 No. 4 SSB Published in the interests of the W ho didn’t care very much whether people of Hermiston and vicin ity by His machinery and stock the Tum -A-Lum Lumber Co, Phone W ere protected or not 3311 > Fiom the wind and the snow of the - i Ralph Brownaon, Editor. weather. Ilia cows were so th ia C. M. Jackson ia bulldng an'kddi-1 They were Just bone and skin tin to his chicken house. ‘ His machinery was rusty and worn. f e\e Vie »vliCM- cart hna s L un I on the corner of East Executive - . - ■ ! H e couldn't make money avenue nerir I'.e V.'lil,,. Ilmice M r the liter twenty years, hrs catered to the Here we arc. Back again and a f Cut It wasn't funny peanut eating procllvltl«* of Presidents Roosevelt. Taft, Wilson, Harding And W ether was always forlorn. mid Coolidge. Hut Kteve says I ‘rest dent Hoover passes hint completely. "Pres ter the rains we start celebrating an ! The moral: See our plans and got ident Hoover Is H nice-ft man,'’ Steve sold, '‘but he never buy a peanut. He open deer season. a price on barns and machine sheds only come here In I lls auto. I say ’hello' nhd he go on." ~ to care for y..ur stock and equipment I t seems th at warship builders thia w in ter. didn't realize they were paying money to wrack peace and disarma ‘‘W heah you all bin?” ment treaties. . Perhaps they thought "Lookin’ foah work.” the nropogandlat went to Geneva to v \\' .\\V shoot crape. ' "M an ! man! Youh cu’oslty gonna LLiLi ' l l / / J J g it yo’ into trouble yet.” tAlHrtÉÑtZ/ o /A r r c r /f iA tv is i c o a s 5 I t lacks now like we would have a wonderful show Friday and Satur day. Don't misa it. THt THE TW° FOLLOWING OUTSTANDI'IG ATTRACTIONS ARE UGIIT TO YOUR ATTENTION AS BEING TWO OF THE FIN- EST SCREEN ACHIEVEMENTS OF THE TALKING SCREEN TO DATE. Sunday-Monday, Oct. 6-7 R ü th C H A T T E R T O K -L E W IS STO NE I f the Farm Relief plan works j well enough, the farm er w ill lose In I the end b eciiae of having to pay an income' tax farm er ANNOUNCEM ENT The Greatest Emotional Play of all tin e, immortalised now on the talking icreen—-100 per cent all talking. THEN COMES, AND HOW— Thura., Fri., Sat., Oct. 10-11-12 (special M ldnlte Preview Wodnosday evening at 11:15 P. M .) MORE LOVING SWEETIES' MORE ROLLICKING LAUGHS!I MORE HARDBOILED BATTLES!!! M. W. SIMS. A. W. TUBNBLAD Hermiston. Ore., Oot 1, 1929. HERMISTON MEAT MARKET ■ DEPENDABLE BUTCHERS PHONE 411 With VICTOR McLAOLKN, EDMUND LOWE. LILY DANITA Makes “W hat Price G lory" as tame as a bedtime story. ______ ALL TALKING — SINGING — LAPPING This picture breaking all world records held by “Covered Wagon and "The Big Parade.” PERFORMANCES AT S:00 P. M —7:00 P. M. AND 9:00 P. M Attend Matinees if poawible for bast seats— no advance in prices. You laughed when you imagined their dialogue la “ W hat Price G lo ry"— you’ll roar when you actually hear them talk in "The Cockeyed W orld.” h n o i At « } -= se= — r R E D W H IT E 1.1 NORTON’S GROCERY A A . OUR CIRCLE OF FRIENDS EN named I LARGES. More good friends for Red a W hite.. More folks SAVING money, S A V IN G time, securing greater SAT ISFA CTIO N. You are invited to Join In the circle. Everybody Attend the Project Fair Friday and Saturday. W a t c h fo r O u r H a n d B ills FOR OUR SPECIALS SA V E THE GREEN Specials Saturdi STAM PS Heavy Sox, Hip Top Boots, Flannel Shirts^Caps, Gloves, Underw ear, to help get ready for colder weather. ■ M rs . Claypool is Coining Sodn WITH A COMPLETE LIME OP LADIES READY TC WEAR COATS HATS, DRESSES AND CUSTOM JEWELRY. WATCH FOR HER HAND BLLR_______________________________ ______________________P M O H E ■w No. 2 Cans, S fo r_____ WHITE NIMDDMANULATED SOAP Large Package ...................... .............. BLACK SILX STOVE POLISH TOMATO SOUP Serv-Ua 3 for SERV-US HOMINY 2 for ...... ... 171 KINGSLEY’S > O U A U T Y A N C » « tW v iC ir r .i Oct. 5-7 GOLDEN WEST CORN “T H E C O C K E Y E D W ORLD” . The partnership of Sims & Turn« blad haä been dissolved. The busi ness will be continued by Mr. Turn- blad under the same name-Hermis- ton Meat Market. TUM-A-LUM SEXTETTE MADAME X A It D , P A M E S « J IM E PAY US A CALL‘D 7 a C A SH A MERRY X-MAS TO YOU ALL -W H EN YOU HAVE , King, Cm tie Gate and Rock Springs Coal, Boxwood. Slab wood j and coast f ir body wood. There once was _______ la . 97c a f- 17c 25c 27c Seri RED&WHITE