Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 22, 1932)
PAGE FOUR Local Happenings Mrs. Leila Phelps was in Pendle- ton Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. w. J. Warner were business visitors in Pendleton Mon day. Walther Ott and Dick Upham, students at O.S.C. arrived lióme Sat urday to spend the holidays. Mrs. James Clayton left Sunday for Palouse, Wn„ where she will visit until Friday with her parents. George McKenzie who is employed in Pendleton spent the first two days of the week with his parents. Miss Catherine McMullen left Friday morning for Portland where she spent a few days before going on to Seattle to visit her sister, Mar garet, who has been there for sev eral months. Catherine plans to re main until the first of the year. Oasis Cheatre Hermiston, Oregon. The Best in Talking Pictures — : ADMISSIONS — 35c and 15c Evenings 25c and 10c Matinees TWO SHOWS: 7:15—9:00 P.M FRIDAY, SATURDAY and SUNDAY Christina» Matinee 2:30 Sunday The story of a great lawyer . . a great lover . . In coourt he was a trickster . . also with women! Juries and women were his rack et! EDMUND LOWE as the ‘Attorney I Defense? with THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1982 THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, ............ .......... 79959999 9 Sommerer WA+C EVELYN BRENT and Constance Cummings PLUS: Two Keel Comedy filled with laughs and a Krazy Kat Cartoon, Mr and Mrs Henry were business visitors in Pendleton Thursday. Miss Marian Henderson, who is a student at the Eastern Oregon Nor mal School in La Grande, arrived home Friday to spend the holidays. H. E. Hitt is confined to his home this week due to a severe case of Influenza. Frank Bilderback is work ing In the confectionery. Miss Gladys Swarner, who student at O.S.C., arrived home the first of the week and will spend the holidays with her parents, , Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Swarner. Mrs. Chas. Hudson and her sis- ter, Miss Louise Wahl, plan to leave Friday for Astella, Or., where they will visit their parents. Mrs. Hudson plans to visit over the holidays and Miss Wahl will remain with her par ents. Harvey DeMoss, principal .of the schools at Reith. was in town Tues- day following the closing of the schools there due to sickness. Mr. DeMoss is a delegate to the state teacher's association meeting in Port land during the holidays. The Misses Georgianna and Elean or Briggs who teach at the Moun tain View school near Salem, plan to spend the holidays with their par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Brigg». Miss Marion Brigg» who teaches at Med ford, will also be with her parents during the holidays. They are ex- pected to arrive Saturday. Miss Meredith Daily, who has been the house guest of her sister. Mrs. lames Clayton for the past month, left Sunday morning for her home in Palouse, Wn. She accompanied Mr. and Mrs. N. Mueller, who wore enroute to Hope, Idaho, where they will spend the holidays with Mrs. Mueller’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Biggs of La Grande were business visitors in town today. Clarence Henning, Elwin Knapp, and Alfred Quiring were Pendleton visitors Saturday. The Misses Florence Pearson and Barbara Wessell were Pendleton vis itors Monday. Win. Shaver has been confined to his bed for the past few days, quite ill. Miss Helen Woughter and Frank Swayze are two University of Oregon students who are »pending the holi days with their rparents. Miss Francis Sale, student at the U. of O., arrived home Tuesday to spend the holidays with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Sale. Mrs. M. Miller, who has been vis iting her son, Paul Miller, in Colum bia district for the past several weeks, left Sunday for her home in Oakland, Calif. Mrs. Ida Gordon and two daugh ters, Ardath and Doris Jane, are ex pected to arrive from Elgin, Or., aturday to spend the holidays with Miss Pauline Stoop. Rev. O. W. Payne motored to Spray, Or., Monday where he officia ted at the funeral of Carl Wagner, a friend of the family. Mr: Payne experienced difficulty in getting over the ice-covered roads. Mr. and Mrs. O. O. Felthouse en tertained at a turkey dinner last Fri day night. Covers were laid for Miss Nell Reeves, Miss Margaret Felt house, Miss Pauline Stoop, Clarence Henning, Alfred Quiring, and the host and hostess. Mrs. Joe Garouttee end two chil dren of Astoria, Or., were the house guests of her sister, Mrs. Gladys Imlth, from Saturday until Tuesday, when she left for Walla Walla, Wn., to spend the holidays with relatives. (Continued from Page 1) Mrs. Smith plans to join them in whistle stood 12-8. that city Saturday to spend the holi The return of Eugene Pierce and days. on Moore, now absent because of lines», to the squad for the Pendle ton game in January will strength en the locals offense. HIGHEST CASH PRICES The Hermiston line-up in the first PAID FOR string game was: Bowman, center; CRFAM AND EGGS Martin end Hunt, forwards; and Columbia Creamery Co., Inc. Zensel and Reeves, guards; Harris 129 N. 21st St. — Portland, Or, and Pierson, substituted. Basketball Squad Plays Echo Teems ’’ J dllvlUvvC .& V C Trip Described (Continued from page One) Merry Christmas! Above you is a solid rock—at least YOU’RE STILL IN TIME. MANY NICE GIFTS AT A GREAT SAVING. you hope it’s solid—and below you Is more solid rock. Crawling through this crack you go, just room enough above you to give you a bump on STEW MEAT ALL STEAKS PORK SAUSAGE HAMBURGER the head once in a while. The pas- sage is quite wide for some distance. 6c per pound 2 lbs. for 25c 10c per pound 3 lbs. for 25c Then we come to an almost solid wall, and, still crawling, turn a ORANGES right-angle corner. There is room Quality Coffee CORN Nuts and Candies here for a person not too large, but Nice and Juicy. Going like hot cakes. one too close to two hundred will 6 cans 54c 10c per lb. and up 1c each to 30c doz. 3 lbs. for 57c puff before getting himself through, Past this corner we ascend a gentle FRESH slope, still of solid rock and still Carrots, Turnips, MJ.B. COFFEE P. A. TOBACCO GINGER SNAPS with a low ceiling. By this time Rutabagoes your hands and knees are tired, and IN BULK 1 lb. Xmas box 89c you wonder if your wrists will bear 3 lbs. for 98c 3 lbs. for 29c the strain longer. You may as well 3 lbs. for 10c go ahead—It’s nearer to the Temple than it is out! Of course you have All Toys Reduced WOOL SOX Men’s Overshoes WOOL SHIRTS to return this same way, but the sights in tils almost inaccessible 4-Buckle — $1.98 25c - 35c - 50c pair 12 Regular Price room will repay you. Here are found $1.19 each the snowy sheets of limestone on the wall, in undulating waves resemb ling falling water—and which are Men’s Silk Neckties Men’s Work Shoes Men’s Silk Sox Children’s Heavy named Niagara Falls. Near them, STOCKINGS 25c - 49c per pair hanging from the ceiling, are those $1.98 $1.00 ties for 49c 9c pair 3 pairs for $1.25 stalactites which, when struck, emit musical tones. The simple scale is here, and those of us who have guid ed in here have found just which ones to strike to play, quite credit ably, "America”. Overshadowing all in your mind, the dark shadow be- I hind all this beauty, is the presence full of the smell of whisky. Temp-a cheap hotel room for the ni' ht in this room of the Pit. The Bot- at ion doesn’t solicit on every street land got drunk. Three days later we tomless Pit, it is called, and comes ♦ All Items Appearing in this orner. The weeds near the hospital ¡received the child that was left as near deserving its name as any- Column are Contributed by the ire not full of drunks. The wards alive. thing, You may lie on its edge— "My nurses can walk down the are not full of miserable, abused Hermiston W. C. T. U. careful. now, not too close—and ♦ 1 remembe children. The hospitals don’t have street at night now. drop into Its depths. No matter how lelirium-tremens wards. The Salva- when they couldn’t. Beasts slept or still the rest of the party keep, you ion Army doesn’t send around ottered or watched on vacant lot wait in vain to hear it hit the bot Dr. Richardson Answers Mrs. Sabin. trucks to pick up Saturday-night ran tell you stories of horro, a tom. No sound ever comes back One of the eloquent “speak-ups." Irunks. In Philadelphia they used ny nurses. from the inky well, and you slip o pick up 4.000 drunks on Saturday "I remember when virtually all carefully back from the edge with who never neglects an opportunity lights. They don t have trucks now ur cases were the cases of children to tell of the tracedies of pre-prohi- an eerie feeling. ecause they don ’ t need them. nistreated by drunken fathers and day», is Dr. Katherine B "Back through the same tortuous bltion “Mrs. Sabin doesn’t know what nothers. frozen, starving, abused Richardson of Mercy Hospital, Kan passage of Worm Alley, and through sas City, Mo. The telling way she she’s talking about. She didn’t see unspeakably, not by bad men, but many more room's and corridors un- replied to Mrs. Charles H. Sabin, the the children I saw. In the winter by good men—good men drunk. til 1 stop in a room and ask it you ophisticated head of the Women's the children of drunkards froze. The “I know little rich girls who com w ish to cut across, thereby saving a Organization for National Prohibi parents weren’t low and depraved. placently inform me that I’m wrong. very considerable retracing of steps. They were drunk and they forgot They say they want liquor back. By thia time you’re tired enough to tion Reform, before an audience of their children. I remember an Okla Children, my friends, will play with one thousand people in the Linwood be anxious to get out for your din homa laborer who brought his three poison. They don’t know any better. ner, so you'll agree. Possibly you Presbyterian Church of Kansas City, children to Kansas City, put them in I do." look around for another passage is told in a recent issue of the Kan than the one which I tell you is the as City Star. We quote from that long way around, but you’ll have to paper: "In the words of one of my small trust me. Having agreed to the atients,” said Dr. Richardson, "I’m "cut-off”, I tell you that I go first: that the passage is solid reck above iot making a speech. I’m telling but soft, dry sand below, easy to dig rou. My memory is good. I’m here ut to any size. Even the heaviest o tell you about the saloon. I’ve may plan to go safely through the ust read an article in the Sunday cut-off. So I drop to my knees, lie dition of the Star that made me I DEPENDABLE GROCERS | down on my stomach, and slowly ingry. Let’s see—" disappear through a reasonably She fumbled with her notes, her small crack in the wall, which you aw set. hadn’t noticed. In a short time you “I just marked down some of the hear my voice, encouraging you to follow. The crack is not high— things that made me particularly nad. Well. Mrs. Charles H. Sabin something like creeping under a bed One by one you follow me, with nay be just misinformed. "She says the settlement workers, more or less difficulty. Somehow it appears harder than when I told you vho visit the poor, want liquor back. about it, and the space not so large 3he doesn’t know my poor. She says as at first. Especially is this true he housewives want liquor back, If the crowd is a Jolly one, and I 'he doesn’t know my housewives, have been able to get some of the he doesn't know my excellent work They’re not the same settle- leading spirits to help me. For truly ers. there is an art in even so simple a ment workers that run around town thing as crawling through here. in their little cars, checking up on Those who know how, may cause an the homes of the little children who almost unlimited amount of diffi- come to Mercy Hospital. -ulty to the ones coming later if "I am not talking Idly. Last year they use just the right twist of the we received and treated 21,000 little clbows to push the send behind children. The families from which EFFECTIVE TILL CHRISTMAS EVE thorn—the hole just fills up, and those children came would make a some weighty person in frantic haste city. I know that city. Five to a to get through, doesn’t think of push family—a city of 100,000. If drink ins it to one side. is good for that poor city. It should best Quality nuts a Lbs. "'did ro kt above and below, or be returned. It those poor people old rock above and shifting sand want it, we will have It back. They bel >sr both ef them tight places to don’t want it. Understand? They get out of. rut if you keep your don’t want it. They remember the Wrapped Pound Package head, and don’t get excited, they saloon, and so do I. "When, out of our yearning for may bo passed safely. In closing, may I wish for you children, we built that hospital, wc sat down and almost cried. We that you’ll keep -your head in tight found we had built a receiving-sta MADE IN OUR OWN CANDY FACTORY—ONE OF THE LARG- places, whether in the cave or out.” tion for the children of the saloon— the spawn of drunkards. EST AND FINEST IN THE WEST. “Listen to me. friends. I remem NOTEBOOKS ON FAVORITE VO- ber. clearly, vividly, tremblingly, I BROKEN PEANUT CHOCOLATES FRENCH CATION CLIMAX COURSE. remember how It was before prohibi- Maybe the rich drink. Let 'ion. MIXED BRITTLE MIXED Centers them drink; there are not many of (From the "Bulldog”) Maybe the poor make home them, filled in The theme of notebooks being Satin Finish Lbs. Lbs. brew. Let them make It. The re- three flavors. made by students of the Occupations suits have not been the same. And lasses is "The Occupation of My Choice." These note books will cli- when Mrs. Sabin says there are more Lbs speakeasies than saloons it is not max the study of vocations made by true. You men about town know it the students during the year. During the past four weeks, the isn’t true. Gold "She wants to know whether pro classes have heard vocational talks Medal Pint given by F. B. Swayze, on hanking; hibition reformed any drunkards. Dr. W. L. Morgan, on dentistry; No. I agree with her. But it hasn’t 1 Pauline Stoop, on journalism: and made new ones. Stick around awhile | Mr. Clausen of the United States under prohibition and the old bums | Mskeesd » Size Can Forestry department, of Pendleton, will die off. Anybody who wants a on forestry. irink can get it. But the air isn't ! EDWARDS POWDERED Lbs. pair Burnham's General Merchandise • • • • • • • • • • • • $ MACMARR STORES Our Wish for You is a th MERRY CHRISTMAS Our store will be closed all day Monday Fi XMAS SPECIALS 29c Mixed Nuts allo s y DATES 2 19c CHRISTMAS CANDIES There's a Red & ITIiitc Food for Every Christmas Need Specials for Friday & Saturday, Dec. 23rd & 19c 33c 25c 59c 2% 98c 25c 8 25c 43c PINEAPPIE 2 33c 45c 25c 35c SWEET POTATOES 5 lbs. CRANBERRIES 2 lbs. MARMALADE. Orange Red & White FLAKEWHITE COFFEE 4 lbs. 3 lb. tin Red & White COFFEE 1 lb. bags Blue & White PUMPKIN, 2 1s Red & White 2 cans FINEAPPIE, 2 He Red & While HOLIDAY CHOCOLATES 21, lbs. PEANUTS Fancy Roasted 3 lbs. MAYONNAISE Red & White Quart SNOWRIFT G 1b. tin CAKE FLOUR Red & White Canada Dry GINGER ALE Large lbs. o N for OLIVES. Stuffed Red & White OK. 2 cans OLIVES QUEEN Red & White 10 oz. cans OLIVES. Ripe Blue & White pints Blue « White APRICOTS. 2‛s Red & White 2 cans SHRIMP, medium Blue * White 2 cans GRAPE FRUIT. 2s Red & White 2 cans SWEET PICKLES Yolo Quarts MARSHMAI LOWS Red & White 1 lb. OYSTERS Blue * White 24th 65c 29c 43c 79c 27c 49c 21c 25c 16c 35c 23c 10c 2 & WHITE STORES I 2 Lbs 25c 15c Salad Dressing PINEAPPLE 12c Sugar 3 19c DEPENDABLE Marshmallows 19c Coffee Package PRE-INVENTORY SALE Real Depression Prices This Sale Includes All Electric Appliances In Stock SAY the red 29c 2 39c 2 29c Merry Christmas Electrically” HERMISTON LIGHT & POWER CO. H . ‘ Vacuum Packed HAM Light Weight Half or whole s in 63c Fruits and Vegetables Florida Grape Fruit.".’,. , toe 29c Cranberries Berries 29c Very Fine Lettuce Large Heads Sweet Potatoes 10 29c Oranges nzzlzeté" 2 D. 29c Phone 241 Hermiston, Ore