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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1933)
THURSDAY, AUGUST 10. 1933. THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. PAGE TWO Uhe Bermiston Arraló Published every Thursday at Hermis- ton, Umatilla County, Oregon, by Pauline M. Stoop and Alfred Quiring, Publishers. Entered as Second Claas Matter December, 1906, Umatilla County, Oregon. Subscription Rates: One Year ................................. Six Months ...... ........................ Three Months ........................ $1.00 .75 .50 P. M. Leader, Marjorie Mullins. Theme. "The Christian Test of Rec reation". Evening church service at 8:00 P. M. Sermon theme, "Why I Be lieve in God”. Boy Scouts meet at the church on Tuesday night at 8:00 P. M. Cub Scouts on Wednesday night at 7:30. The young folks who attended summer institute will give their re ports at the Sunday evening service. All young people are invited to be present. CHRISTIAN OciroN ( BAPTIST CHURCH. Sunday school at 10:00 A. M. George E. Mason of Pendleton will deliver the sermon at 11:00 A. M. with the subject. "Where Do We Go From Here?" HERMISTON UNION CHURCH. 10:15 A. M., Communion. 10:25 A. M., Song Service. M., Sermon by Rev. 10:50 Payne. 11:30 A. M , Teaching service. 7:00 P. M.. Christian Endeavor. 8:00 P. M. Preaching service with the sermon by Rev. Payne. METHODIST CHURCH NOTES. Church service every Sunday at 10:00 A. M. Sermon theme this week, “God and The Moral Man.” Sunday school at 11:00 A. M. Epworth League service at 7:00 SCIEXC. CHURCHES 66(pirit" was the subject of the 0 Lesson-Sermon in all Church- es of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, August 6. The Golden Text was, "Teach me to do thy will; for thou art my God; thy spirit is good" (Ps 143:10). Among the citations which com prised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible: "Now we have received, not the spirit or the world, but the spirit which is of God; that we might know the things that are freely given to u* ot God" (I Cor. 2:12). The Lesson-Sermon also includ- id the following correlative pas- sage from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures", by Mary Baker Eddy: "The universe ot Spirit is peopled with spiritual beings, and Its government is di- vine Science. Man Is the offspring, not of the lowest but of the highest qualities of Mind. Man under- s ands spiritual existence in pro portion as his treasures of Truth and Love are enlarged" (pp. 264, 265). TO THE PEOPLE OF THE UMATILLA IRRIGATION PROJECTS WE HEARTILY ENDORSE THE Pendleton Battery MADE IN PENDLETON Fully Guaranteed by Umatilla County Taxpayers. See JIM PEARSON LOCAL DEALER Hermiston, Ore. Buy This Battery and Keep Your Money at Home. t Butter Creek-Minnehaha t By Mrs. Wm. Hineline Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McCarton, Mrs. W. J. McDaid and son. Edward, ind Miss Catherine McDaid motored to Pendleton Wednesday. Miss Mc Daid remained in Pendleton where she is employed. Alex McKenty who has been vi- siting at his brother's home for the past several months returned to his home at Havre, Montana. Mrs. Jessie M. Hesser arrived Friday from a two months vacation trip in the middle west. While there she visited relatives and attended the World’s Fair. Katrena Kryger went to Rittner Sunday where she will be employed. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Ayers and son Alvin, of Portland, visited at the Thomas McCarton home Tuesday. Alvin, Jr., remained for a longer vi sit. Virginia Rodda who has been at tending summer school in Portland returned to her home in this vicini ty Saturday. Catherine McMullen was a dinner guest at the Hineline home Sunday. Dinner guests at the E. L. Jack- son home Sunday were: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Campbell and Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Jackson and sons. Neva Richards returned home from Portland Wednesday where she has been visiting the past several weeks. Omer Nickerson of Vernonia is vi siting his daughter, Mrs. C. A. Lynch. U. Burt of the Oregon State college and Mr. Ackerman of the Federal Department of Agriculture met with the Holstein 4-H Calf club it the C. A. Lynch ranch Sunday to take pictures for farmer magazines. ♦ ***••• • • • 4 ♦ All Items Appearing in this Column are Contributed by the Hermiston W. C. T. U. Beer—The Toadstool. i One ot the great controversies of tile current hysteria is over .the idea i that beer is a food. The National Woman’s Christian Temperance Un ion in its educational campaign against the alcohol habit finds that large numbers of people are likely o be alcoholized through the spread of propaganda that beer is a food. The “food " properties of beer can e viewed somewhat as the food pro perties of a toadstool. Mushrooms and toadstools have practically the same food value, but the toadstool In addition contains poison. So it is with beer: its slight food value is completely offset by the inherent voison in the alcohol which science I condemns as a beverage. The only reason this is not generally under stood is because of the clamor of the liquor propagandists. Beer Is now put forward as a ion-fattening food. But eight oun- i ces of tour per cent beer contains | two teaspoonfuls of the active poi- | ion. alcohol, a narcotic, habit-form- | ing drug. Jcenry “rd UNTIL WE LEARNED BETTER “ : Ms 4440999999**% and Louis Hutchison were visitors in Pilot Rock Friday. t BOARDMAN NEWS t Mr. and Mrs. William Rhodes, By Mrs. Dan Ransier whose strawberry patch was killed Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Williams of last winter, have been busy this North Powder visited at the Glen week replanting their patch, ex pecting to have a large crop next Mackan home last week. County Agent Charles Smith and year. son and Mr. McDaniels from Hepp Bill Tucker who has been em- ner were in Boardman on business ' ployed in the wheat country. re- Wednesday. turned home to recuperate from a Stewart Arnold was the honor broken rib. Dave Prudhomme, who is spend guest at a charming birthday party last Wednesday at his home. A love ing the summer at the Joe Udey ly dinner was served after which ranch, spent Sunday at the Joe Dyer dancing was the diversion for the home. C. A. Keller and daughters, Rose evening. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Bates. Mr. and Mrs. Dan mary and Francis, were dinner Ransier, Mr. Sauders and Mr. and guests at the John Jendrzejewski home Sunday. Mrs. Stewart Arnold. Mrs. J. H. DeMoss and son Harvey Marvin Ransier who is employed in Echo visited his parents, Mr. and and her mother, were dinner guests at the A. C. Swarner home Sunday. Mrs Dan Ransier, Friday. S. Epperson was a business visi Neonia Hadley returned to her home in Pendleton Sunday after a tor in Pendleton Wednesday. A family reunion was held at the two weeks visit at the Frank Had Ora Thompson home Sunday even ley home. Those attending were: Mr. and Lois Messenger returned home the ing. Mrs. Arlie Thompson and family first of the week from Portland Mr. and where she has been visiting rela from Lakeview, Oregon; Mrs. Cecil Ledgett of Prosser, Wn. ; tives the past three weeks. Clara May Dillon who has been Mr. and Mrs. Tom Moore; Mr. and in Portland the past three weeks, Mrs. C. T. Thompson; Mr. and Mrs. Hooker; and Mr. and Mrs. Ora returned to her home in this city Alton Thompson. Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Ves Attebury. Mr. % # # * * * * * * * * and Mrs. Charlie Attebury and son motored to Ione on business Wed- IRRIGON NEWS + nesday. By Mrs. W. C. Isom Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bradley, and Calvin Allen, who has been em Mr. and Mrs. Charles Attebury mo at Plymouth for some time, tored to Montana last Thursday to ployed to this city Friday. look after mining interests in that returned Mr. and Mrs. R. Jones were state. e business visitors at Walla Walla Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cramer, Mr. Wednesday. and Mrs. Earl Cramer, and Mrs. Mrs. Price and daughter, Pearl, Fortier and daughter, Norma, mo from California are visiting at the tived to Camelie where they spent Carl Esbe home this week. Saturday and Sunday picking huc ira Grabiel from Stevenson, Wn., kleberries visited Saturday and Sunday with Glen Mackan returned to this ci relatives. ty Monday from Portland. Mrs. Lawrenson of The Dalles is Roy Marlow of Pendleton was a visiting at the home of her daugh- visitor at the Frank Hadley home ter, Mrs. O. Coryell. Sunday. Mr. Barnes motored to Elgin for Luyle Huffel motored to Portland a few days visit Friday. on business Sunday evening. Grace Doble of Pendleton Is visit ing her aunt, Mrs. Eva Fagerström. Mr. and Mrs. O. Coryell and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wright motored to COLUMBIA NEWS Walla Walla Wednesday. By Florence Udey Russell and Benny McCoy made a Mr. and Mrs. Irie Thompson and trip to Pendleton Wednesday on > family from southern Oregon are vi business. Valles Dexter and Max Leach mo- siting with Mr. Thompson’s brother, Orie Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Wil tored to Pendleton Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. George Kendler of liams and family "from Columbia are in southern Oregon taking care Umatilla visited at the home of Mrs. of Ire Thompson's ranch while he is Kendler’s brother, Earl Isom, Sat- in this vicinity. Mrs. Williams is tirday night. George Scarlett left Sunday to Mr. Thompson’s sister. Mrs. Joe Udey and daughter Flor work in the Government Camp near ence visited at the O. O. Felthouse Heppner. He was accompanied as far as Heppner by Will Scarlett and home Thursday. Mrs. Barhams and son Childs, Wayne Caldwell. Louise Moyer who has been visit Mrs. Joe Udey and daughter Flor- enee were visitors at the Orvil ing in the F. Leicht home the past two weeks returned to her home in Knotts home Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Crawford of Heppner Sunday. New melon stands have been Holdman were visitors in Columbia erected on the A. Bowlware and Tuesday. Mrs. Orvil Knotts and son Leland Walter Grider place recently. Floyd Oliver of Imnaha, Ore., spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jess Oliver. Mr. and Mrs. Marshal Markham and family of Pendleton visited at the Emmett McCoy and F. Markham homes Sunday. Russell McCoy left Friday for a few days visit with friends in The Dalles. Robert Walpole and Edward Houghton played with the Branstet- ter orchestra at a dance in Pendle- ton Saturday night. The premium lists for the North Morrow County Fair are now avail- our car able at the Irrigon and Boardman post offices. Until we learned better, we used to mix wood and steel in bodies and wheels. It was the best way to make bodies—then. But the stato of the art has advanced. Of course, it is more expensive to make an all-steel body than to make a wooden frame and nail steel panels on to it. The better way in volves an initial expenditure of several millions of dollars for new dies, which renders a change very costly. Cars, especially large expensive cars which are produced in small volume, cannot afford this, because the dies cost as much for one car as for a million. That alone explains why all- steel bodies are not used in all cars. But our basic policy from the beginning is to make a good car better- regardless of cost. For example, when we discarded wood-steel body construction, it was not because we lacked wood. We still have some thousands of acres of the best hard wood in America. Economy would urge us to use up thewgod, first, and then adopt the better all-steel body. But we decided that quality was more important than expense. We weighed the reasons, for and against, before we made the change. We could see only one reason for retaining a mixed __ nailing the metal on, instead of welding an all-steel body into a strong one-piece whole. That reason was, it would be cheaper—for us. Our reasons for adopting an all-steel body were these: A wood-steel body is not much stronger structurally than its wooden frame. In al American climates, wood construction weakens with ago. Every used car lot gives evidence of this. Rain seeps in between joints and the wood decays. A car may have a metal surface, and yet not be of steel construction. Under extreme shock or stress the steel body remains intact dente per haps. but not crushed. ... Steel does not need wood for strength or protection. Wood is line ion furniture, but not for the high speed vehicles of 1933. In the Ford body there are no joints to squeak, no seams to crack wood-and-stee- ° % .ane ► vinosi orte ter. or leak. The all-steel body is more expensive—to us, but not to you. By all odds, then, steel bodies seem preferable. Wheels also have become all-steel. No cne argues that an electrically welded one-piece steel wheel, such as the Ford wheel, needs to e "strengthened" by adding wood to it. The one-piece all-steel body is the strongest, safest, quietest, most durable body made. That is our only reason for making them. August 7th. 1933 A & ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ANY ONE WHO SACRIFICES TO SAVE BANK BOOK knows the true worth of a dollar and this does not mean depriving one of necessities. The fellow who is trying to keep something ot what he earns, parts with his money only for real necessities. He maintains a bank account and is building a sub stantial cash reserve. A Bank Account Will Help You FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Hermiston Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits Over 150,000. R. ALEXANDER. Vice-President D. M. DEETER, Asst. Cashier F. B. SWAYZE. President A. H. NORTON, Cashier 909999999990000903000000090911111111198*9 Mrs. W. A. Conlon and daughter, Mildred motored to Pendleton Sat urday. Francis Stephens, who is em- ployed in the mines near Baker, Ore., is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Stephens. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Stephens and son, Gale, spent Monday and Tues day in Prosser, Wn. Roy Kendler has returned to Nys- sa, Ore., after several weeks visit at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kendler. Mrs. Otto Pound and children spent several days of last week In Portland. Miss Ethel Walsh has returned to Portland after a weeks visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Walsh. and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smith daughter of Lewiston. Idaho, accom panied by Joanne Kenedy of Pendle ton visited at the Art Bousquet home Sunday evening. Mrs. Lingow and son Joseph re turned to their home in Starbuck, Wednesday after a few days visit with relatives. Mrs. James Byrnes and daughter. Joan, returned Tuesday from a visit with Mr. and Mrs. V D Bramar in Oswego, Oregon $8999209900008014009903990009999900990000011*009 SOME 98c Children’s LHPr SHOES MEN’S WORK SHOES JUST IN $1.79 $1.98 $2.19 MEN’S OXFORDS JUST IN $2.98 MEN’S WORK OXFORDS $1.98 $ 6 MEN’S WORK PANTS 98c $1'29 $1.49 Men s Dress Pants . . . $1.98 MEN’S DRESS PANTS to $8 - $2.98 MEN’S HIGH PRICED DRESS HOSE HALF PRICE .......... CHEAP WOMEN’S DRESSES AND DRESS GOODS Straw Hats — Dress Hats & Cans Levi Strauss OVERALLS. BARGAIN PRICES! Chas .G. Burke 90000002$0000000$0000000000000000007 * * * * * * * * / * * t UMATILLA NEWS By Louise Byrnes Mrs. William Switzler and moth er, Mrs. O’Connell accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Stephens and Mrs. Lingow motored to Pendleton Monday. Mrs. Pete McNabb and daughter Maxine and sons Johnny and Her- bert, returned Sunday from a weeks visit in Cosmopolis, Wn. Mrs. Ralph Davis and son Billy left Saturday for a few days visit in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Lewellyn spent a few days of last week in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jones of The Dalles were in Umatilla on business Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Troat and children of Walla Walla visited at the Gus Tonies home Saturday. They re turned to Walla Walla Sunday ac companied by Gus Tonies and daugh ter Dorothy. Mr. Tonies returned home Monday but Dorothy will visit tor a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Skeen and daugh ters. Marlyn and Joan of LaGrande, spent the week end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Logan. Mrs. Elmore McKenzie and daugh ters, Betty and Jeanne, spent Wed nesday and Thursday in Portland. Mrs. William Switzler. Mrs. O’Con neli. Mrs. Lingow, Mr. and Mrs. Jim O’Connell and daughters. Miss Rosa line Lennox and Francis Stephens, motored to Kennewick Sunday even ing. Mildred Conlon left Sunday for a visit with May Stangeby in Seabold, Washington. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Bray motored to Walla Walla last week where Mr. Bray received medical treatment. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Spencer spent Wednesday and Thursday of last week in The Dalles on business. Mr. and Mrs. Olaf Stangeby of Seabold. Wn.. visited friends in this city Wednesday. William Bennett, who has spent the past several months in Canyon City, is visi tn g his mother, Mrs. Mitchem. Mrs. Art Bousquet was called to Condon Friday due to the illness of her father. Mr. Smith. Mrs. Jack Cherry spent last Thurs day in Portland shopping. Charles Spencer and daughters. Wanda and Zona and Miss Marga ret Hower all of Seatle, Wn.. visited the last of the week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Spencer. WE PAY CASH for EGGS & Local Produce WE DO OUR PART Headquarters for Fruit Jars and Trimmings Ball Mason Quarts Kerr Self Sealers Quarts Presto Glass Top Quarts OTHERS IN PROPORTION. Clabber Girl Baking Powder 10 oz. can If you don’t like it as well as any baking powder you have ever used, we pay your money back. Coffee guaranteed to please. Per lb. 27c or 3 for 79c Krafts Salad Dressing OUR 7:00 O’CLOCK Is Will please you or double the price you paid for it will be refund ed by the manufacturers. Booth’s Sardines Oval tins. A good hot weather food. 19c Snowdrift Shortening 3 Los. 43c 2 Tins for P. & G. Naptha Soap 1029c KINGSLEY'S