Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 26, 1929)
¿MJ« WANT ADS JÖBBMISTOW HERALD, WnMfTHTOBI. OBXGOM. Trophy for the Outboard Racers VOX SAIS FDR SALE— New Goodrich tires, on e 33x4 Radio, 95.00; one 31x5 x25 Sllvertow n, 18.00; one 30x3 H Radio cord G. B.. >3.00; two red tubes, 91.00 each. Call Mra. Todd at U m atilla Pharmacy. 17-2tp FOR SALE OR TRADE— One four h o n e potato digger. S. L. Carson. 44-tfc FOR SALE— Some household furni ture. See Roy Haddox or Mrs. Haddox at Morlan’a Variety store. 15-tfc Burk's For Bargains. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED— A carload of a lfalfa hay. S ta te price and grade. Nygren 'Broa. Dairy, Albany, Oregon. 1 7 -ltc FOUND— In reception room, 3 caps. Owners may have by id en tifyin g Dr. F. V. Prime. 16-3tc B urk’s For Bargains. Col. McClelland Barclay, well known magazine illustrator, puts the flnlsh- ing touches to the Commander E. F. MacDonald trophy which will be awarded to the fastest outboard motor-boat racer In 1930. The sculpture, which is the artist’s first serious venture Into the field of modeling, was ordered by Commander MacDonald of Chicago, commodore of the* Outboard Motorboat association. WILL TRADE — Young m ilch cow« for ewes. J. E. Hallyburton. 15-tfc court for the relief prayed for and demanded In her com plaint on file in the above en titled matter, to- On December 11 a yearling Hol- w it: for Judgment against defendant teln heifer w ithout any marks or for the sum of 9200 on her first brands broke into my place. Uuless cause of action, together w ith inter redeemed by owner, she w ill be sold est thereon at the rate of 6 per cent to the highest bidder for caab at 2 per annum from the 10th day of o'clock on January 4, 1930, at my April, 1928, until paid; and for the place 7 1-2 miles southw est from further sum of 9229.00 <i i la in tiff’s H erm iston. Dated December 17, second cause of action, together with 1929. interest thereon at the rate of 6 per (S ign ed ) A. D. SMITH. cent per annum from the 31st day ut October, 1928, until paid, and for IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE p lain tiff’s costa and disbursements in this action incurred, and for a fur STATE OF OREGON FOR ther order of the oourt ordering and umatilla ' county directing tbe sale of all of your right, i title and interest In tbe follow ing des B. Strahorn, P lain tiff, crlbed real property now held .under vs. attachm ent in the above entitled mat W illiam Soukup, Defendant. ter, to-w it: SUMMONS Law No. 3908 South H alf of Southeast Quarter, To W illiam Soukup, t h i above Southw est Quarter of Southw est named defendant: Quarter, North Half of North H alf, IN THE NAME OF THE STATE Southeast Quarter of Northwest OF OREGON Quarter, South H alf of Northeast You are hereby required to appear Quarter, N ortheast Quarter of and answ er the com plaint filed Southeast Quarter of Section 17, against you in the above entitled Township 3 South, Range 27, E. court and action w ith in 4 weeks W. M., Morrow County, Oregon, from the date of tbe first publics and tion of th is summons, and it you fail Lot 9 in Block C of Hermiston to appear and answer, for want Orchards and the East 200 feet of thereof, p lain tiff w ill apply to said Lot Two (2 ) In Block C. of Her miston Orchards, U m atilla County, Burk's For Bargains. Oregon. This summons is served upon you by publication thereof once a week TAKEN UP NOTICE 1 C rescent ] WANTED— Two or three Guernsey cows. Must be abortion free and TB tested. I w ant the best, price Immaterial. Roy Belsbee, Wasco, Oregon. ..14-tfc for four successive weeks in the Her miston Herald of Hermiston, Oregon, by order of Honorable James Alger Fee. Judge of the above entitled court, which said order was made and dated the 13th day of December, 1929 and tbe first publication of this summons Is tbe 19th day of Decem ber. 1929. Raley, Raley & Warner, John F. Kilkenny, Alfred F. Cunha, A ttorneys for P laintiff. Poetoffice address, Pen dleton, Oregon. 14 5te Can’t Dodge Trouble “Our sorrows are a purt of our lives,” suld Hi Ho, the sage of China town. “He who seeks to run away front his troubles Is trying to run sway from himself.”—Washington Star. H erm iston Second Hand Store.— Tree puller, also 250 ft. in. cable. Fur- aiture, hardware and stoves. lOtfc not to let tlie scraps fall to the Door. One evening she excitedly ran to her mother and exclaimed: “Oh. mother I 1 dropped the newspaper crumbs on the floor I” To The Dalles. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Hallyburton, of the Columbia district, left Her miston Tuesday for The Dalles where they w ill spend Christmas w ith Mr. Hallyburton's parents. INSURANCE— Fire, Life, Auto— "In sure in sure insurance.” J. M. Biggs. ♦ -♦ ’ ♦ - ♦ - ♦ - ♦ - ♦ - ♦ - ♦ - f ♦ ♦ CHURCH NOTES ♦ ♦ B aptist-C hristian Church It is w ell for us that Christmas precedes New Years day by Just one week. This gives us tim e, after we have had our atten tion drawn to “ the seed of the wom an,” to think about another year. 1929 on the one hand has been a year of blessing and m ultiplied grace, w h ile on the other hand it has been a year of failures, "broken vows and promises unkept.” Let u s refresh our minds w ith th is fa ct "that there hath not failed one word of all h is good promises,” and renew our allegian ce to the Holy th in gs. May the interest and attend ance o f boys and girls not fall off after the Christmas treats for Jesus has a rich feast of good th in g s for them in His ward. B ible school w ill start on time. Be there. The mess age follow ing w ill be on "Paul’s View of the Incarnation. Christian E n deavor at 6:30’ P. M. The young people are carrying on w ith increas ed Interest at every service. The even in g message w ill be on "My Stand in g.” How are we closing tbe 1929 account? On Tuesday night, the last of the year, we are holding a watch night service to commence at 9:30 P. M. T h is service w ill c onstst of brief .talks, thanksgiving, prayer and Braise. We extend a cordial in v ita tion to other evangelical bodies in the tow n to Join w ith w ith us. Come. On Thursday night our midweek prayer service w ith Bible study in j evangelism . ■ JF 6NMSTIM SCIENCE CHURCHES MTs the Universe, Including Man. A Evolved by Atomic Force?" was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon hi all Churches e f Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, Dec. 22. * The Golden Text was, “God, who commanded the light to shine out e f darkness, hath shined In our hearts, to give the light e f tbe knowledge of the glory of God in the face i f Jesus Christ" (II Cor. 4:9). Among the citations which com prised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible: “By the word ef the Lord-were the heavens made; and all the host of them by the breath ef hie mouth" (Pa. 99:4). The Lesson-Sermon also Included the following p e o n a g e f r o m the Christian Bclence textbook. "Science and Health with Key to tbe Scriptures”, by Mary Baker end the universe are evolved _ Spirit, and so are spirit nai, ie fixed la divine Science as Is the sis gala the tenes of only as they lese the seaee (F < 9 ). Between You and Loss One of Our Fire Insurance Policies J. M. BIGGS P hon e 51 H S. McKENZIE, M. D- Eye. Ear- Nose and Throat Office: 1-2-3 Inland Empire Bldg. Pendleton, Oregon W. J. W ARNER Attorney-at-Law Herm iston I : : Orage» DR. A. E. MARBLE Chiropractor I Trent both Acute and Chronic D is eases. Office: Two doors w est of postofflco Phone 481 Office Hours. 10 to 12; 1 :3 0 to 4. Herm iston, Oregon. PRANN FUNERAL SERVICE Telephone 801 N ight or Daay CHAPEL, FUNERAL COACH AND SANITARY PREPARATION ROOM Ambulance Service Hermiston Avenue A BRAVE MAN DEAD? > INHERITED GENEROSITY / W. L. MORGAN, D. M. D. now associated w ith Dr. F. V. PRIME General D entistry X-Ray and Diagnosis Bank B uilding Phone Connections Bundays and Evenings by apelat- ment. HERMISTON BARBER SHOP AND BEAUTY PARLOR Mr. and Mrs. Shaar, Prop. Phone 461 cpufeoMd wholesome:! HUMAN SACRIFICES. USEFUL WARNINGS? HERMISTON POST NO. 37 Meets first and third Thurs day. Legion A uxiliary meet» second and fourth Thursday. Legion Hall. ALFRED W. CHRISTOPHERSON P hysician and Surgeon Three-year-old Corine's favorite Res. Phone 719 pastime was to cut out pictures In Office Phone 738. newspapers. Her mother warned her Office in F irst N ational Bank Bldg. FOUND— Sheepskin vest. Owner may have same by callin g at the Her ald o fflie and id en tifyin g same and paying for th is add. 14-tfc Burk’s For Bargains. VINEYARD LODGE NO. 204, I O. t t F. meets each Monday evening In Odd Fellows' bail. V isiting members cor dially invited. W. R. Longhorn, Secretary, Gwynn Hughes, N. O. Bread, Eh 7 BAKING POWDEI STRAYED— Sorrel mare w ith Btriped face. Please n otify H. H. Chris ten sen on Roy Sullivan place or th e Herald office. H. H. Chris tensen. 12-tfc LODGE DIRECTORY mtslj gnu.... ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■J Those that pity themselves because gieir health it ''not quite what it ought to be” may consider Baron von Huene ield, who died on the operating table, undergoing his thirteenth operation (or an incurable disease of the stomach that had afflicted him (or years. *• — • „ ' Suffering hopelessly, knowing that he could not live long and must en dure many operations, von Hueneield ted and the planned u , carried out > — — German- —____ Irish flight across the Atlantic Ocean. > Such courage and will power should make others ashamed to complain.^» À ■ J. L. VAUGH AN- 206 E a st Court St. and A NY AND Everthing Electrical FOR YOU Nau frar J. Pierpont Morgan gives New York Hospital two buildings worth 92,000,000. Giving teems to be in herited, as illustrated alto -in the ease of the Rockefellers. I Mr. Morgan's father gave to New York one of its finest institutions, a great lying-m hospital. ■ Phone 139 Pendleton, Ora. ■ ?■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ P Serious rioting in Ind(g Is caused by a report that Mohammedans kid napped Hindu children and sacrificed them in connection with the construc tion of a new bndge. _ The report probably is not true. , Whoa! Here We Are COUNTRY STORE at the e • Men often live long when the doctor tells them that they wilt soon die. A warning makes them careful. James Melrose, twice Lord Mayor of York. England. Is dead, aged one hundred. Insurance company refuted him as a had risk seventy year* ago. The famous Luigi Comaro became interested in his health when doctors toM him at forty that he must soon die. He ate only twelve ounces of solid food, drank fifteen ounces of red wine daily.^died at one hundred •nd (our J A N U A R Y 1,1930 From 1 P- M. U n til Y ou a re B rok e. C h ip s Food fo r M erch a n d ise a t C ou n try S to re J a n . 1 O n ly Poker, Crap, Blackjack, Stud, Bridge, Roulette C h ip s $1 p er S ta ck o f 20 ^prmißiuu ffîpat fBarfept A. W. TURNBLAD It w ill urpriee you how much we can save you during the year on your shoe bill. All we usk Is that you bring your shoos to us for repairing In ample tim e so we can do a good Job. I Madame Bella Pollack died in Rumania, aged 118. leaving twenty- one children, the oldest eighty-five, and a fiance who would have been her third husband. Madame Pollack ate two and one-half pounds of black bread and a pound of sugar every day. and was never ill until her last illness. 4 T Lindbergh, on his way* from Miami Hermiston, Oregon D ra w in g fo r P rizes a t 10:30 Once important works were usually accompanied by human sacrifices. Somebody was killed and buried under (he corner of a new building. A child nr adult wat often killed and buried m a shallow hole m a field newly planted. Knowing nothing about fer tilizer* they observed with “religious awe'' that the grass grew greener where the corpse was buried. to^ Panama, "hopped off" on his , twenty-seventh birthday. 1 Only (wenty-seven, and his name i» known wherever men ard civilized. • Only twenty-seven, and already he has conquered the ocean, and, what is more important, the respect of every A F ull l i n e Of _________ SHOE OILS__________ AND A Bappy Nnu ürar THE LOYALTY OF FRIENDS IS OF INESTIMATABLE VALUE. AC CORDINGLY A SINCERE FEELING OF GRATITUDE FOR YOUR GOOD WILL ACCOMPANIES THE GREET ING. MAY THE COMING SEASON BRING YOU ALL A FULL REALIZA TION OF YOUR BEST HOPES. Leathers & Little Inc. This young American's history make» millions of others feel as Caesar did when be read the life of Alexander the Great and suddody burst into tears, realizing that Alex ander had conquered the world when he waz younger than Caesar was then. ' ‘Herbert Hoover may find hnport- |ant aviation work for Lindbergh." ■Nothing more probable. An engineer knows that somebody who knows how to do what you want done is valuable. Mr. Hoover understands the engi neering part of flying and all its im portance. from mail carrying to na tional defense. , ¿Colonel Lindbergh understands A»mg part A 6 m combina BOWMAN SHOE SHOP HERMISTON, OREGON TROY L A U N D R Y PH O N E 1 9 - W KECK BARBER SHOP LATEST BOBBING SUAVING Judson Jackson. 28, was Instantly killed at the Huff logging camp seven miles east of Oakland when he was thrown from a partly loaded truck, a 16-foot log failing from the load and passing over his body. The turkey grading school spon sored by tne United States depart ment of agriculture, under the direc tion ot T. W. H aiti, market specialist of the bureau of agricultural econom ics, was held in Iioaeburg recently. Elam Dixon, two-yenrold daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dixon, was burned fatally when she set her dress Hftre with matches obtained while her mother was in the back yard tor a few minutes hanging out the washing. The month Jnst closed was the driest No*ember in Jackson county since 1912. There was rain on only one day and the total was barely more than a trace. Since September 1 the total precipitation has been bat 1.14 Inches. C. H. Miller of Bend won first prise in alslke clover seed exhibits, and Fred Duquett of Bend was sixth in the Chicago livestock show. Oregon won Ilrst over 13 states in the 4-H ! clubs' children's garment contest on un entry made hy Barbara Dunn and ! Mary Ruth Koon. ~ ________