PAGE FOUR
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON,
THURSDAY,
F. B. Swayze was • Porland visit
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bloom of Uma
or the first of the week.
*
tilla were the house guests of Mr.
and Mrs. C. L. Dyer several days
Mr. and Mrs. O. K. Mudge of Hin last week, and were joined Christ-
CREAM AND EGGS
kle. spent Christmas with Mrs. mas day by Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Columbia Creamery Co., Inc.
Mudge’s parents in Spokane. Wn.
Isaac of Pilot Rock, Or. Mr. and Mrs.
129 N. 21st St.
Portland, Or.
Bloom left Monday for Spokane, Wn.
A. W. Prann made a business trip
Mrs. G. W. Bailey was a Pendle-
Jim Neary of Pendleton spent the where they will visit Mr. Bloom's
on visitor Wednesday.
to Pendleton Wednesday.
holidays with relatives and friends parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bloom,
here.
until after New Years.
Mrs. Felix Roumageaux left Sat
B. J. Nation has been confined to
urday for Portland where she will his home this week because of ill
Alfred Quiring spent Christmas idi
spend the holidays with her sister. ness.
with his parents In Dallas, Oregon. #
WITH FARMERS AROUND
He returned Tuesday afternoon.
•
THE STATE
Miss Ina Lenhart of Portland
Everett Trickey of Pendleton
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a
Hermiston, Oregon.
spent Christmas with her parents, was the house guest of Chester John
Garnet D. Best, assistant county
The Best in Talking rictures
Many Feed Crops Grown.
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Lenhart.
son over the holidays.
agent, Julius Gimble, and Joe Nor-1
ASTORIA—Clatsop county produ
ton have been confined to their1
MIDNIGHT MATINEE
Mrs. Marshall Newport is a med
Mrs. W. H. Simmons is spending home this week, due to influenza. ced nearly twice the amount of dai
ical patient in the Hermiston Medi- the holidays with her daughter, Mrs.
ry feed crops this year as compared
Saturday New Year’s Eve.
al hospital.
to
last, judging from the volume of
Lieuallen
Brownell
at
Umatilla.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry and children,
Regular Admission Prices.
Bobbie. Marie, and two little boys of seed sales of the typical crops used
Serpentine
Ardyth Cochran of Moro, Oregon,
Mr. and Mrs. B. 8. Kingsley and Cold Springs. are visiting with rela- by dairymen for this purpose, ré
pent Christmas with his brother
FREE !
Paper Hats FREE !
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Jackson and two tives in Grand View, Wn.
| ports the feed and seed department
W. J. Cochran.
I of the Lower Columbia Dairy coop-
Balloons
sons were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. H. T. Fraser Christmas day.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Myers of Fossil, erative association. Most of the in-
Main Feature Starts 12:05
•
W. F. Boynton and family of He-
Ore., spent Christmas day with Mr. crease was in the crops recommend-
Comedies & Ssorts from 11:00
lix spent Christmas day with Mr.
Miss Alta Lillie, teacher In the La Myers' parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Mace ed by the extension service, such as
till midnight.
Boynton’s mother, Mrs. W. F. Boyn- Grande high school, spent Christ-Myers.
Bortfield turnip, common vetch,
ton.
___
I
Grey oats, rye grass, Schoolmam oats,
mas ...
with ...
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Hamm.
SUNDAY - MONDAY
She returned Wednesday afternoon.
Miss Margaret Neary was the white and red clover, orchard grass
Margaret Horn of Irrigon is a
I house guest of Mrs. David Mittles- and timothy. Records show 360 lbs.
MATINEE 2:30 SUNDAY
medical patient in the Hermiston
Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Bloom and dorf at the home of Mr. and Mrs. [ of Bortfield turnip seed sold com-
DCUBIE FEATURE BILL
Medical hospital. She was commit-
Mrs. Francis Householder spent P. P. Sullivan. Miss Neary is teach- Pared with 260 last year.
ed Saturday.
"My Wife’s Family”
Christmas day with Mr. and Mrs. ing at Echo this year.
And Then How Old is Ann?
C. F. Gardiner at Umatilla.
DALLAS—If you are mathemati
Side-Splitting English Comedy of
Jewel Smith of Pilot Rock spent
----------
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Payne. Mrs. cally inclined figure this one out:
unreasonable mother-in-law ano
'hristmas with his parents, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Scroggs and L. R. Lawson, and Miss Theta Burn-If a man has a 10-acre apple orch-
wise-cracking son-in-law.
Mrs. M. M. Smith In Columbia dis four sons, Joe, John, Jim and Jerry, side were dinner guests Christmas ard, 45 trees to the acre, and catches
and
trict.
of Sunnyside, Wn., spent Christmas day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. O. | 245 codling moth worms on each
YAKIMA CANUTT
tree
by banding, how many less
with Mrs. Scroggs’ parents, Mr. and W. Payne.
in
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Reece and Em- Mrs. Thos. Campbell. .
. I worms will he have next year it
rson returned from a two weeks vi-
Mrs. Mary Morrow of Portland, each moth would have laid from 50
Canyon Hawks”
ft in Enterprise, Ore., Sunday, They
Marion Nance of Hood River, Or., who has been visiting her daughter, to 75 eggs each? This is not mere-
A Western
pent tbe week end with the Coul- who has been the house guest of Mrs. A. W. Christopherson, for the ]y a theoretical problem on the Ham-
er family at Pendleton.
PLUS A COMEDY
Lawrence and Monroe Swarner for past two weeks, left Monday for her mel orchard near here where trial
the past two weeks, left early Sat home.
banding with, medicated corrugated
Ralph Galbraith of Lebanon, Ore., urday morning for his home.
| paper this year resulted in capturing
FRIDAY, SATURDAY
Mrs. Ed Crawford of Cold Springs and killing as high as 437 worms
Is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs
accompanied
by
under --------
a single
band, and —
an _.
average
MATINEE 2:30 SATURDAY
3. O. Felthouse, and Mr. and Mrs’
Miss Marjorie Burnham, who is a—
‘
" Betty and
Tjt- Norman,
-------- unuer
-------------------
—„
W. W. Felthouse, this week. He ar- student at the Ellensburg Normal in left last Thursday for a holiday visit of 245 worms.' This average is con
THE BEST SHOW
Washington, is spending the Christ- with Mrs Crawford’s parents in sidered extra high, however, as a
rived in Hermiston last Friday.
IN MANY MONTHS
I complete spray program was not fol-
mas holidays with her parents, Mr. ! | Monta na.
I lowed this year. The tests with these
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Caln left and Mrs. J. S. Burnham.
Mr. and
D. - M.
Deeter spent
----- 1 Mrs.
----- —
—---------
— bands were arranged by County
1
Sunday afternoon for Portland to
| Christmas with Mrs. Deeter s moth- Agent J. R. Beck last spring.
spend the holidays with Mr. Caln’s
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Illsley of a- er, Mrs, Bertha Windust, at Dayton, I
Gopher Poisoning Successful.
oa rents. They plan to return the mas, Wn., were house guests at ( the
Wn. Sam Windust, brother of Mrs.
last of the » week.
ONTARIO—Gopher poisoning on
home of Mr. IHsley's parents, Mr. Deeter, returned with them and will
basis has been completed
ANN HARDING
and Mrs. E. P. Illsley, over Christ remain until after New Years day. | a — district
...
,
3 here this fall with many farmers re-
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Simons and mas.
RICHARD DIX
)
porting highly satisfactory results
Nettle
and
Floyd
Simons
of
Walla
Mrs. Rena Waterman left Satur-
Edna May Oliver
Walla spent Christmas day with Mr.
Bill Felthouse,
who uas leen day for Seattle where she will spend as kills have ranged as high as 95
A blazing . . GIGorious Romance
per cent the first time over. Peti
md Mrs. Curtis Simons. They re spending the holidays with his par- the holidays with her daughter,
of America That Will Live For
Mrs. tions are in circulation to have this
mained until Tuesday when Mr. Si ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Felt- Delaney.
ever and Forever.
district plan extended to other areas
mons motored to Walla Walla with house, returned to Walla Walla, Wn.
Comedy: Two Lips & Julips
next year. The work was carried
them.
lie was accompanied home Thursday, where he is a student at
Mr.
and
Mrs.
A.
D.
Rintoul
and
and Cartoon.
by Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Simons who Whitman college. He is schedi lcd ! son Bob of Long Creek, Ore., were on with the cooperation of the coun
ty court which supplied a revolving
will remain until Sunday.
to play basketball this week end:
I Christmas day visitors at the home
fund, and was supervised by the
of Mrs. Rintoul’s parents, Mr. and county
agent.
Landowners paid
Mrs. Geo. Briggs. .,
only the actual cost of covering their
own fields, which varied according
Miss Lois Jackion of Portland and to the severity of the infestation.
HIGHEST CASH PRICES
PAID FOR
DECEMBER 29, 1932
Local Happenings
GREETINGS
TO OUR FRIENDS
(asisCheatre
Conquerors”
of resoluti'ns—and to think of reso
lutions is to think of saving more
during
1933.
Horsewives
from tbe Mexican border to the Hud-
JANUARY 1,
1900.
WAS NOT
) T he
F irst DAY
of THE
TWENTIETH
CENTURY
son Bay have found that you’ll get
better food, better prices and better
service resolving to deal at a Red &
Oregon Medium as Honey State.
Bobby Thomas, small two-year-
CORVALLIS—Census figures show
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Thom
that 53 2 8 farmers in Oregon ha
as. who has been a surgical pa
some bees in 1930. Survey figure:
tient in the Hermiston Medical hos
| on cost of production made among
pital for the past two weeks was
j commercial beekeepers last yea.
j discharged Wednesday.
White store.
LOOK
NEXT
WEEK’S
AD
FOR PROOF OF THIS STATEMENT
Specials for Friday & Saturday, Dec. 30th and 31st
SUTSHINE KRISPIES - 2 »» carton
Fresh Crisp-Clightly Salted Wafers
SUGAR
8 lbs.
CRANPEFRY SAUCE - 17-0»- cans
29c
39c
19c
Red * While
AH ready to serve - Comes out of the can just
right to cut Into as many services as you like
STRAWBERRY JAM - 2 No. 2 cans
Pure fruit & sugar. Walla Walla made
1.1b. bags
COFFEE
Red & White
COFFEE - Big Targain Blend • 3lb-
33c
31c
59c
PEARS - Elue & White - 2 lge. cans
Medium Halves - In Heavy Syrup
3 No. 2 Cans
Fancy Florida - Red & White.
GRAPE FRUIT
No. 2 Cans
Blood red - tender - Blue & White
SLICED BEETS
SPINACH - Red * White - Large Can
No grit or dead leaves.
CATSUP
2 Large Bottles
Red & White
LARD - Wax Wrapt Pkgs.
99
ÖOC
CHOICE STEER STEAKS
OVEN BAKED BEAKS In large cans
• nd BROWN BREAD
BOTH FOR
Baked slowly to a rich golden brown in brick
ovens. Red & White. REAL NEW ENGLAND
BAKING POWDER
Red * White
1 ’ 23c
35c
50c
16c
16c
35c
Meat Department
A splendid value.
hags
It's a real pleasure to serve coffee that is al
ways the same and always good.
lbs.
Best Grade Walla Brand
lb.
SAUSAGE or
HAMBURGER
HAM — boned and tied
HE REDS WHITE
“74 The Sign of a Dependable Store
3 Iba.
lb.
35c
15c
25c
16c
STORES
We realize that the year just passed has been a par-
ticularly »trying one In many ways, but we wish for you In
nineteen hundred and thirty-three a very Happy and Prosper-
ous New Year.
KINSGLEY’S
i >
>
HERMISTON, OREGON
0191111030 . ----- , 0$10900010000900001000393 . . . ............................ .
show that the cost in alfalfa regions
was 6.2c a pound; in the fireweed
regions 6.9c a pound and in the Wil
lamette valley 7.8c a pound. The
average price received for the 1931
crop was estimated at 5c a pound.
Oregon has a total of 40,000 colonies
as compared with 4,620,650 in the
entire United States, according to la
test estimates. Twenty-eight states
produced more honey than Oregon
and 19 states produced less.
food preparation. “My kitchen has
a low ceiling which is sealed. The
sides are covered with oil cloth. My
kitchen cabinet is close to my stove
with the table part of It linoleum-
covered so that hot pans do not burn
It. Bread pans and pot lids are on
the wall between my stove and ta-
ble. To the left of the stove I am
building a series of three small cor-
ner shelves.”
GRESHAM—A large quantity beef
stew recipe worked out by Miss
Frances Clinton, home demonstra
tion agent of Multnomah county, in
cludes cracked wheat Instead of the
usual potato and utilizes canners
quality beef. A commercial cannery
in Multnomah county, and donated
help, made it possible to put out
from 1500 to 2000 cans of stew dal
ly during several days of October.
During another four-day run more
than 47,000 No. 2 % cans of toma
toes were canned.
MACMARR STORES
To think of New Year’s is to think
money
So I do not want to let this day slip by without tell
ing you how much we have enjoyed your friendship.
ST. HELENS—Columbia county
homemakers are conducting a real
‘‘live at home” program reports Mrs.
Sarah V. Case, county home demon
stration agent. She says that sta
tistics compiled from 30 families on
ly, one-tenth of all those enrolled
in the year round garden project,
show a total of 4,186 cans.of vege-
tables and 7,189 cans of fruit pre-
served. In addition 574 pounds of
fruit and 1.096 pounds of vegetables
have been dried. Besides these food
supplies available for winter- use,
REDMOND— Needy families of
approximately 16.07 5
pounds of the Redmond community are taken
fresh vegetables have been stored care of through a committee of nine
and more than 30,000 pounds of women, organized under the direc
root vegetables are estimated stored tion of the home demonstration
in the ground.
agent, Elizabeth Vance. This wel
DURKEE—"My kitchen is quite fare committee has three divisions;
small so every corner of It has to one for case investigation, one for
I Miss Grace Jackson of Pendleton
New Spud Outyields Burbank.
count,” says a Baker county home distribution of supplies, and one for
spent Christmas with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Jackson in Min- - HILLSBORO— The new Katahdin maker in describing her place for solicitation of supplies.
potatoes tried out here this year on
nehaha district.
the A. J. Rowell farm gave a bettei
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Prindle left yield than Burbanks grown In the
Saturday for Union, Ora., where same field, showing unusual drout:
they will spend the holidays with resistance, reports County Agent W
Mrs. Prindle’s mother and sisters. F. Cyrus. The drouth resistance 1
They plan to return the first of next the result of a larger root systen
I
DEPENDABLE GROCERS
|
typical of the variety, ho says. The
week.
Katahdin is a round potato and thu>
H. K. Dean left Tuesday evening is not quite as attractive to th<
NGs
START NOW TO MAKE THF
for Fortland where he will attend general trade but it is high in qua-
YEAR
A PROSPEROUS 01 E
to business matters until the last of | lity and may have a distinct piaci
the week. Mr. Dean is superinten 1 in western Oregon especially when
PAYING CASH AT MAC MA
dent of the Umatilla Experiment the long varieties do not always at
station south of town.
tain desirable size and form.
"The 3
JAN
New Years Is, perhaps, the one time when one forgets
the daily routine of business and looks back over the year
thinking of old friends.
j
Ing for Portland where he is a dele-
gate to the state teachers' associa-
I tlon meeting which opened Wednes-
day in that city.
Mr. DeMoss is
principal of the school at Reith, Or. .
* •
< >
¡,
%
? ’
Chas. Rohrman, brother of A. F.
Rohrman of the Rohrman Garage,
and Ewald Rohrman, both juniors in
engineering at Oregon State college,
were in Hermiston Saturday. They
are spending the holidays in Pendle
ton with their parents,
t
This is a fancy
gage.
a Plagase
AvUr hard
wheat flour.
Bag 69%
MONTE CATSUP
9
14 oz. 29c
,
he bottles
49 lb.
DEL
,
Made from vine ripened tomatoes
Crackers - 2
Boxes
Snow Flake or Honey Maid Grahams
HAPPY —
NEW
Mt Coffee-3 Lbs.
HAPPY
NEW
YEAR
TIME TURNS NOT BACK- ♦
WARD IN ITS FLIGHT—BUT %
REACHES EVER FORWARD ; ’
—SURE THAT ITS PATH IS j >
GLORIOUS. MAY YOU FOL- ? I
LOW THAT PATH TO A2
BRIGHT AND
FRUITFUL : •
YEAR IN 1933.
PLEASE COME IN AND
ASK FOR YOUR FREE
a
CALENDAR
FOR
1933.
4Qc
LOG CABIN
Syrup
$ •
HERMISTON. OREGON
Tall
Cans
85c
a.
298
Cane and Maple
Small
Size
as are .
Medium
Size
a.
43C
COFFEE un” 33C
CornMeal wh"Or"Yeñow l 29c
MAXWELL HOUSE
Crystal White Soap-10 Bars ZSc
10° FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
Lettuce Head 6c
gr
HERSHEY’S
a a
C ocoa 1 LB. TIN I9° Fresh Green 4
SPINACH * Lbs. 18
Ripe OLIVES Tall
HIGHWAY
Cans
a ang
o
3 LB.
Malt SYRUP CAN
63c
GINGER 4 12 oz. e p
ALE
Bottles
43
JOLLY TIME
Hermiston
Drug Co
g
2290.
MlAE " •
BUDWEISER
Miss Wilma Stoop of Portland and
Henry Stoop of The Dalles were I < •
guests of Miss Pauline Stoop on
Christmas. Mr. Stoop will remain ′ ’
until the last of
turning to The Dalles. Miss Stoop
left Tuesday afternoon to resume ‘ '
her studies in the Behnke-Walker 2
business college.
‘ : :
-
YEAR
Federal
Brand
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Elliott of Pen
dleton, and Lorene Wright of Port
i land were guests of Mr. and Mrs. O
C. Pierce for Christmas dinner. Mr.
snd Mrs. Elliott returned home Mon-
day accompanied by Mrs. Pierce,
and daughter Marlon, and eon Stan-
who will visit until New Year’s
day.
reyr HF '
MAC
MARR
Ground to your order for fineness
Mr. and Mrs. R. Alexander of Pen
dleton. and Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Nor-
ilon were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. E. P. Dodd Christmas day. Mr.
and Mrs. Alexander plan to spend
| two weeks with their daughter and
family.
V
These Prices Effective till TUESPAY,
Jiit. ora.
Pop COIT!
4
Lbs.
250
Guaranteed to’Po,
SWEET _
< (ge
SPUDS DLbs — d %
LEMONS
Dox.
Sunkist - Large Size
ARIZONA
Grape Fruit
6
FOR
206
— •