HERMISTON
HERALD,
OREGON.
HERMISTON,
EASTERN OREGON OF
FERS DAIRYING FIELD
irrigated regions, and corn, or sun
flowers
in the higher belts, does well
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
I and provides succulence of an ideal
nature as silage.
“Alfalfa hay and silage make a
at Hermiston, in the State of Oregon, at the elose
—
dairy ration second to none, and with
of business, September 8, 1920.
OTC-
!
O. A. C., Corvallis.— Eostern
I them grain feeding is reduced to a
RESOURCES
gon irrigated districts offer splendid
I minimum.”
opportunities for successful dairying,
Loans and discounts----------- $250,741 51
Deduct notes and bills rediscounted with
says E. 3. Fitts. U. S. and O. A. C.
dairy field specialist. "The climate
11,395.00 239,346.51
is favorable, and an abundance of
Overdrafts, secured
533.33 the right kind of feed is produced.
Unsecured.........
533.33
No. 9281.
Reserve Dist. No. 12
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
COMMUNITY FAIRS .
U. S. bonds to secure circulation (par
value)....
-6,250.00
U. S. bonds and certificates of indebted-
ness owned and unpledged 31.719.69
War Savings certificates and Thrift
$846.00
Stamps actually owned
Total U. S. government securities ----
Securities other than U. S. bonds (not in
cluding stock) owned unpledged
Stock of Federal Reserve bank (50 per
cent of subscription) .................-
Equity in banking house______________
Furniture and fixtures ......
-............-
Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve
bank...............
-
Item with Federal Reserve bank in pro
cess of collection (not available as re-
Zoeth Houser
Republican Candidate for
SHERIFF
Strict enforcement of the law
and a Fair Deal for Everybody.
Cash in vault and net amounts due from
national banks
Total item 13. 14. 1,5.16 and 17- 10,273.21
Check; on banks located outside of city
or town of reporting bank and other
cash items............. *.......................
Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer
and due from U. S. Treasurer.....
Interest earned but not collected—ap
proximate—on notes and bills receiv-
2,500.00
able not past due
Alfalfa Cheapest and Best
“The dairy cow for maximum pro
fitable production must have a lib
eral amount of protein. One of the
cheapest and best sources is alfalfa
38,815.69
hay.
Experienced dairymen every
38,662.84 where recognize its value and feed
large amounts of it even in places
1,050.00 far distant from point of production.
4,500.00
“This adds expenses of handling,
3,450.74
baling, freight and commission or sel
17.141.78 ling costs to the cost of hay where it
is grown.
Even with these added
costs
it
is
still
the cheapest feed they
1,836.28
can buy, and the handicap does not
8,436.93 force them out of the business.
. ............................
Cow Changes Hay to Milk
“Dairying is a manufacturing en
174.85
terprise with the cow converting
312.50 raw material—hay—into concentrat
ed product—milk. The nearer the
plant is to the source of materials
supply, the greater the opportunity
$354,261.45
for profit.
“Alfalfa thrives luxuriantly in the
Total
• THE •
LIABILITIES
• UNIVERSITY.
Capital stock paid in......... ......
25.000.00
Surplus fund........ ...........
10,000.00
Undivided profits ....................... 14,826.96
Less current expense, interest and taxes
paid............-............. -.......... 4,821.70 10,005.26
Circulating notes outstanding . .......
6,250.00
Net amounts due to National banks..... -
263.07
Certified checks outstanding ....................
130.00
Cashier’s checks outstanding...............
1,457.56
Total of items 30,31. 32 and 33
1.850.63
Demand deposits:
Individual deposits subject to check..... 229,801.04
Certificates of deposit due in less than 30
days (other than for money borrowed) 29,960.27
Total demand deposits . 259,781.31
Time Deposits:
Certificates of deposits (other than for
money borrowed) ........
— 31,374.25
Total of time deposits............. 31,374.25
Bills payable with federal reserve bank . 10,000.00
•OREGON•
—in maintained by the state
in order that the young peo
ple of Oregon may receive,
without cost, the benefits of
a liberal education.
The University includes the College of
Literature. Science and the Arts, the
Graduate School, the School of Phys
ical Education, and the professional
Schools of Law. Medicine (at Portland).
Architecture. Commerce, Journalism,
Education and Music:
High standards of scholarship are
made possible by an able faculty, veil
equipped laboratories and a library of
nearly 100.000 volumes.
Supervised athletics are encouraged
end every attention given the health
and welfare of the students.
1[
For a catalogue or for any information,
address:
1
Correct—Attest:
F. B. SWAYZE.
J. R. RALEY,
R. ALEXANDER,
Directors.
PAYS
ARE YOU GIVING YOUR CHILD HIS CHANCE?
THOSE STATES ARE WEALTHIEST THAT HAVE INVESTED
MOST IN EDUCATION
Oregon Agricultural College
Through a 'Liberal and Practical Education' prepares the young man
and young woman for useful citizenship and successful careers in
HOME ECONOMICS
VOCATIONAL EDUCATION
Th training includes Physical Education, Music, English, Modern
Language, Art. and the other essentials of a standard
technical college course
.
Sal oct your tirai ac
cording to the toada
they have to travel:
TUITION IS FREE
FOR INFORMATION WRITE TO
THE REGISTRAR,
SEEN
| ANJAN A DON couEC:
l es, os WE EVER GOIG
1 - PAN BN , \ LSY I
Maris, New Director
Paul V. Marls, director of O. A. C.
extension work, has been appointed
a director of the Pacific Cooperative
Poultry Producers. He believes the
association Is entitled to the moral
HERE isn’t any "country"
any more. The automo
bile has brought the most
remote settlement almost as
close to the center of things
as the next county was in
the old days.
U
To hear some tire dealers
talk you might think that
nobody knew anything about
tires except the fellow from
Broadway.
T
With Common School Education ....
4 Chances
With High School Education ............ 87 Chances
With College Education ...................... 800 Chances
FALL TERM OPENS SEPTEMBER 20, 1920.
vow®
around on a Sunday
APerson with No Education has but One Chance in 150,000 to Ren
der Distinguished Serivce to the Public
MINING
FORESTRY
S BONE
T A NEWSPAPER W
ev - GOVERNMEN, dee) UE
we vostre, AN ACT GRIEVED
v - conoR evove ANN
wrUs{ w. KONE ‘ GEONIZL!
w 00es, HEs GOY eus to
’ VAN, E6T ux ct O aew .
W I HE GwEs We SPACE
Look at the
roads for twenty miles
For the Individual and for the State
AGRICULTURE ENGINEERING
COMMERCE
PHARMACY
Congress Needs to Know
‘ All congress rather than the spec
ial committee needs education in the
needs and merits of western land rec-
lamation policies, according to N. J.
Sinnott, congressman from the third
Oregon district.
Mr. Sinnott said
that it takes more than petitions to
western senators and congressmen to
get the necessary laws and appropri
ations for carrying out the western
program. The western group is out
voted more than two to one. and the
best way to get votes is to enlighten
eastern men in irrigation and drain
age problems.
MICKIE SAYS:
$354,261.45
Liabilities for rediscounts with federal
reserve bank......... .......
- 11,395.00
EDUCATION
• -
If a community bloweth not its
own horn by some form of community
activities, verily by whom shall it be
blown ?
Advertisers have discovered that
good characteristics of their products
which are so familiar to them as to
seem commonplace are often not so
well known to the great buying pub
lic. Goods must be talked about if
business is to be secured. The same
holds true with communities. The
excellence of neighborhood products
and the special lines in which var
ions individuals excel may seem like
a very old story to those immediately
concerned, but there are plenty of
folks near by who have not heard
this story, or. if by chance they have
heard it, it is very much worth while
from a business standpoint to repeat
it—and more than once.
It follows that promoting some
form of community fair, such as an
backing of the college, and has ac
cepted the appointment as an oppor
tunity to further the important poul
try industry of the state.
LS
630
State of Oregon
I
County of Umatilla 9
*
I, A. L. Larson, cashier of the above named
bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement
is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
A. L. LARSON. Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 15th day
of September, 1920.
W. J. Warner, Notary Public
My commission expires Feb. 9, 1921
With a heightened confidence
gained by the recent expression
of publie aupport. the University
ia now entering upon an era of
large development and extended
THE REGISTRAR
University of Orego
........ .......................... :................
Total
HELPS PRODUCTION
exhibit of local products, is profit
able from many points of view. It
stimulates better production of stock,
farm produce, and garden truck. It
engenders community pride, and ad
vertises in an attractive fashion good
products and those who produced
them.
Persons interested in securing fur
ther information on the successful
management of community fairs
should write the United States De
partment of Agriculture for litera
ture on this subject.
In sandy or hilly coun
try, wherever the going
is apt to be heavy—The
U. a Nobby.
For ordinary country
roads—The U. 8. Chain
Oregon Agricultural College, Corvallis, Oregon
or Usco.
For front wheels—The
U. S. Plain.
For beat results—
everywhere —U. 8.
Royal Cords.
LIBERTY BAKERY
W. O. Sutherland, Prop.
. YOUR HOME INSTITUTION
Hermiston, Oregon
Eat More “Home-Made” Bread
That’s not the basis we
go on.
We give every man credit
for knowing what he ia
spending hia money on,
whether he drives up here
in his small car from ten
miles out in the country or
is passing through from the
capital in his limousine.
-
MR. CAR MAN
:
How about those new tires. Have they got any tread
cuts, sand boils or loose tread? Look them over or bring
them to the Haywood Tire Shop.
I MAKE RIM CUTS A SPECIALTY.
Yours for more mileage,
.
•
•
w
#
•
HAYWOOD TIRE SHOP
:
m
That’s one thing we like
about U. S. Tires.
They make no distinction
between the small car
owner and the owner of the
biggest car in the country.
It’s all the same to them.
So long as a man owns an
automobile — large or small
—he’s entitled to the very
best tire they can give him.
Quality has always been
the outstanding feature of
U. S. Tires. There’s no
limit on the U. S. guarantee.
All U. S. Tires are guaranteed
for the life of the tire.
IV
We have given a lot of
thought to this tire proposi
tion. There is some advan
tage in being the represent
atives of the oldest and largest
rubber concern in the world.
Drop in the next time
you’re down this way and
let us tel! you some interest
ing facts about tires.
United States Tires
Hermiston Auto Co.
Orders taken for RUBBER STAMPS
CunmLES
•XxiloE