HERALD WANT ADS PAY USE Local Happenings THEM! O HERMISTON, OREGON First Show Starts 7:30 Second about 9:15 FRIDAY - SATURDAY Too big for any Broadway stage- that's why George White • brings it to the screen. GEORGE WHITE'S SCANDALS RUDY VALLEE .... * , JIMMY DURANTE .... ADRIENNE AMES .... ALICE FAYE . . . . Wait Till You Hear These Song Hits: “Hold My Hand” "Sweet And Simple" “You Nasty Man" "My Dog Loves Your Dog” "Six Women" "So Nice” PLUS SHORT FEATURES SUNDAY-MONDAY MATINEE 2:30 SUNDAY Bring the children to see “THREE LITTLE PIGS” IN TECHNICOLOR LEE TRACY Advice to ; the LOVELORN in HE’D GIVE ANY BROKEN HEART ANOTHER BREAK! Chapter II—Tarzan the Fearless Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday How much sin makes ‘half a sinner" See the amusing answer in this hilarious picture. HALF A SINNER JOEL McCREA— SALLY THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934 THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. PAGE FOUR BLANE— BERTON CHURCHILL— A loveable gambler known as "The Deacon:" ... A beautiful girl from nowhere — and a boy willing to (ight for what he wanted! ... A combination that will make you laugh and cry, as you thrill to this marvelous piece of screen entertainment. COMEDY—"Born on April 1st." "Strange As It Seems” Miss Marjorie Ebert of Echo was the house guest of Miss Margaret Felthouse over the week end. Walter Hamm has been confined to bis home for the past three days because of illness. Burke Doyle of Plymouth, Wn„ visited the first of the week with his brother and family. Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Doyle. Marvin Rankin recently spent a week in Portland visiting his aunt Mrs. Abbey Rankin. Miss Nell Reeves and Frank Mor­ gan spent the Fourth at Hoquiam, Wn., with Mr. Morgan’s father. Clyde Adair of Roseburg is spend­ ing the summer at the home of his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Green of Stanfield. Rev. C. R. Moore, pastor Of the Hermiston Union church, left Sun­ day night for his home in Los Angeles. Calif., on a week's vaca­ tion. Mrs. Huddo of Klamath Falls is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Huff. She is Mr. Huff s daughter. Dr. J. P. Stewart, eye-sight spec- ialiat of Pendleton, will be at the Hermiston hotel Monday, July 9th. adv Hours 1:00 to 5:00 p. m. The Stanfield Christian Endeavor met Sunday, July 1, at the J. M. Richards home with David Gibson as leader. Piano solos by Dorothy Shelton and a talk by Rev. J. F. Gibson featured to gathering. Clarence Henning who is attend- ing summer school at Cheney Nor­ mal at Cheney, Wn., arrived Tues­ day to spend the Fourth in Hermis- ton. He plans to return Sunday. Mrs. Fred Barker and family of Susanville, Calif., are visiting rela­ tives and friends in Hermiston They arrived Monday and will spend a month here. E. P. Dodd has been confined to his home for the past week because of illness, but is somewhat Improved it resent. Mrs. Georgia Henderson left Tues lay evening tor Portland where she pent the Fourth with her daughter Marian who Is In the Coffey clinic hospital there. She plans to returi Thursday night. W. R. Gwinn spent the Fourth at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. El- Ils. Mrs. Gwinn and son Rex who lave been visiting at the Ellis home for the past few weeks will return home with Mr. Gwinn. Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Dceter left aturday night for Everett, Wn., on a two week's va ation trip. Mis Marion Briggs Is working in th First National Bank during Mi Deeter’s absence. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Duvall and Mrs. Levi Reeder left Tuesday ai ternoon for Meacham Lake where they spent the Fourth. Mr. Reeder, who Is employed near Baker. Joined them Wednesday morning. They re­ turned Thursday afternoon. Mrs. A. W. Christopherson am daughter Barbara left Thursday morning for Seaside, Or., where they plan to spend the remainder of the summer. They were accompanied to Portland by Mrs. Wm. Griffith who will spend several weeks with her sister, Mrs. Alice Stelwer, In Salem and & NOW IN EFFECT PORTLAND ROS Now air conailiontd Observation and Dining Cars—to make your comfort supreme. Fresh, clean, purified air tempered to your utmost comfort at all seasons of the year. OTHER FEATURES: Modern Standard Sleepers; new type tourist Sleepers, de luxe Chai Cor. Barber shop. Both. Radio. Library. Buffer sodo fountain. Those fam- ous meais at popular prices. Off the Hay food service. Sleeping Car Rates Now 73 Loss Local Agent will quote lew fores to all points and help you pian trip. and cooperating with county agents in advising farmers as to their use. “Every farmer who is In a pro­ duction control association has a contractual relationship with Uncle Sam much the same as he would have with a landlord from whom he is renting on the shares,” 'explains Mr. Kuhlman. “Every such renter would have to keep some records, and in the same way the govern­ ment expects every contract signer to keep simple accounts and is help­ ing by supplying a book for the pur­ pose free.” Observations of field men who have made cost of production studies show that not more than a fourth to a third of Oregon farmers have kept any form of written accounts in the east. Most of these keep only records of receipts and expenses rather than making summaries of their various enterprises and for the whole farm at the beginning of the year. “The AAA has called attention to the need of some record which will aid individually and collectively in getting more reliable data for fu­ ture use and which will help farm­ ers eliminate weak spots in their business and encourage the strong ones," Kuhlman continued. “In the country as a whole the AAA has provided two and one-half million farmers with these record books and has arranged with the ex­ tension services for any necessary aid in starting the work. It has frankly stated, however, that the contracting farmer need not use that particular book if he prefers any other one, possibly one more com- píete. . “Many Oregon farmers who have always kept regular account books are Continuing with them and plan to transfer the necessary informa­ tion to the AAA books for whatever inspection may be made. Others just starting are choosing to begin with J. 8. Burnham has been confined to his borne because of illness. Mr. and Mrs. William Athow are the parents of a seven pound bay girl born June 27. The little one has been named Arlene Ann. Frank Graham of Elgin is visit- ing his father, Harland Graham, here this week. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Ballard Pendleton were house guests of Mr. I and Mrs. Dave Mittelsdorf over the I fourth J. S. Burnham plans to leave Fri-i day for Portland where he will re-1 ceive medical attention. Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Franklin : are the parents of a baby daughter | born Sunday evening at the Her- 1 miston hospital. She has been named Betty Joe. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Biggs and sons John and Dan of LaGrande, spent the Fourth In Hermiston. They cele- brated the day at the home of Mrs. I Garnet D. Best. Ina Wessell motored to Grand view. Wn.. Monday and returned with Rosalie Whitney who was the house guest of Barbara Wessell over the Fourth. REGON FARMERS RECEIVE Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Morgan and family of Richfield, Wn., arrived 10,000 AAA RECORD BOOKS last Friday and are the house guests Between 10.000 and 12,000 farm of Mr. Morgan's brother and sister- iccount books have been distributed in-law, Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Morgen The young people of the Epworth ! 'ree to Oregon farmers who have League plan a swimming party and ! joined in some phase of agricul- weiner roast Saturday night, July ural adjustment with the federal lepartment of agriculture, resulting 7, leaving the church at 7:0C in the greatest single impetus to o'clock. Mrs. M. P. Cassidy of Walla Walla arm record keeping ever experienc­ visited her sister, Mrs. A. E. Ben- ¡ 'd her, says G. W. Kuhlman, emer- sel, and neice, Mrs. W. M. Pearson ! rency extension economist who has Thursday. She was accompanied by I been assisting in the distribution Mrs. Charles Mochel who visited a: ! the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Ellis, j Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Edmonds of | Edmond's Orchard below Umatilla j and Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Swick and | daughter Geraldyne of Ridgefield | Wn., motored to Pasco last Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Cochran and | Donald Williams spent the week en< it Ice lake, one of the many lakes ir | ins 1 the mountains above Wallowa lake i They found many snow banks In th< mountains, with wild flowers bloom- ng at their edge. Mr. and Mrs. Burleigh Sprauge ■ fakland. Calif., were guests at th iome of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ran- In last week. Mrs. Sprauge is man DEPENDABLE ger of the Owl Drug Co. in Oak 'and. Guests at the home of Mr. and Japan Orange Pekoe Mrs. C. M. Best on the third and GREEN BLACK ourth of July were Mr. and Mrs [ \rchey Bond and daughter Peggy | Ir. and Mrs. W. H. Till. Mrs. Win- ile Till and daughter Mary Lou ami 1rs. Grace Strong, all of Pendleton 1 MILD CURED Miss Florence Udey. who ha been employed in Portland for the I past year, visited this week with her I parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Udey. ir Columbia district. Miss Florence WALD00RF TOILET was accomanied by Ernest Grof. Jim >rof, Evelyn Richards and Keith Cooper who were her house guest | wer the Fourth. Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Barlow of BEST FOODS ‘ortland, and Mr. Balow's uncle O | B. Barlow, were house guests of Mr | nd Mrs. O. L. Barlow over the I ourth. F. L. Barlow lived at Hep- mer eleven years ago but since that QUART JAR ime has been employed I by Mt 'umery-Ward & Co. in Portland KELLOGGS OR POST TOASTIE he former Is a brother of O. L 'arlow. Mrs. Geo. Briggs accompanied ter daughters, Eleanor and Geor-,%, -tanna, and son Edmund, as far and 2 PACKAGES Valla Walla Inst Saturday where | i he visited friends while they mo I red to Grangeville. Idaho, where LIGHT WEIGHT dmund has employment In the eamery by E. W. West, one time «Ident of Hermiston. They return- ■ 1 the first of the week. : 1 Mrs. Bertha Collina and daughter | ‘ athryn of Pendleton left that city a ist Saturday for Los Angeles, Calif.. |B here they sailed Tuesday. July 2. | 8 or the Orient They expect to return U SMALL WHITE OR RED ome by the first of September. Mrs ? ollins Is a daughter of 'li inni L Mrs. R. Alexander of Pendleton who been visiting at the home of heir daughter and family. Mr. and '1rs. E. P. Dodd of Hermiston. Semi- tennial • Celebration • LaGrande, Ore 7 /Reduced Fares. 2nd Season CHICAGO WORLDS , FAIR NOW IN POOGNtSi in n BA | $5120—Chair Cars $61.45— Tourist Sleepers Cheese lb. 15c Tissue 6 rolls 25C Mayonnaise 2C Bacon Backs Boston Butts Pound .... 18c BEANS 4 e 10 lbs. FANCY BLUE ROSE SWIFT & COMPANY BUYERS en sands of sunny Florida, the east­ ern group will visit the out-of-doors marvels and large cities of the At­ lantic coast. New York, with her canyons of commerce; Washington, the Athens of America: Boston, hub- eity of Colonial America; New Or- leans, with her crooked foreign streets bordered with green-shutter- ed and scroll-worked French houses; all of these American meccas will be stopping points for the happy wanderers of the 1934 University of Tours expeditions. BALLARD NOW IN CHARGE Miss Mary Petri and Miss Marga­ ret Elliott, teachers in. the "local schools, will combine study with pleasure this week, as they leave with the University of. Tours for a two-month travel stud^'of America. They will visit by bus .10,000 miles of the United States and Canada while taking regular college cour- ses. Teachers from forty states will gather in Chicago, beginning June 21 for a thrilling week attending the 1934 Century of Progress Expo­ sition before splitting Into the east- ern and western divisions for the two-months Journeys which will span the continent. Approximately 800 teachers will earn college credits upon Universi­ ty of Tours which is a summer school division of Oklahoma City Universi­ ty. Included among the, wonders of nature which the tourists will visit are the Grand Canyon, Yosemite Na­ tional Park, Carlsbad Caverns, Yel- lowstone National Park, Canada’s Pikes majestic Vancouver Island, Peak, the California . 7 Coast, the Painted Desert, and the Petrified Forest. The teachers will travel under three flags as they tour the United States, Mexico and Canada. From the quaint old-world atmos­ phere of French Quebec to the gold- OF 0. S. C. EXTENSION WORK Ballard, widely known F. throughout Oregon through his ser­ vice as state county agent leader, is now in active charge of the exten­ sion service at Oregon State college, having been appointed vice-director. Under the new coordinated arrange­ ment in agriculture at the college, W. A. Schoenfeld is officially the director of extension as he is direct­ or of experiment stations and dean of the instructional division. Ballard is a graduate of Oregon State who served one year as county Hampshire, coming then to Oregon agent in his native state of New where he has been on the extension Hampshire where he has been on the extension staff for 17 years. He has served here as marketing agent, as­ sistant state leader and state leader. A Correction We wish to correct a classified ad inserted in last week's issue of the Herald by Thos. Campbell which read “Apple thinners, twenty-five cents per hour.” The ad should have read "twenty cents per hour.” ; V J RICE EP CO 10 lbs. SP7 ÂEÏ 38c Fri., July 6th to Thurs., July 12 NEW PACK SUNLADEN No.2 Cans 3 cns.29C, . JELL WELL 6 pkgs. .. . 27c (Case, 24 Cans, $2.25) HIGHWAY GOLDEN SWEET Corn No. 303 Cans (Inclusive) ALL FLAVORS Canned Goods Peas Sale Prices Effective 3 ens. 29C or Catsup 2 Mat (Case. 24 Cans, $2.25) CERTO 236 BOTTLE.............................—VeT SOLID PACK Tomatoes 2,s 3 cns.33C (Case, 24 Cans, $2.55) Swans Down HILLSDALE CAKE FLOUR Sauerkraut % 333C (Case, 24 Cans. $2.55) Beans Cut PACKAGE Segen. 3 •• 29c DILL (Case. 24 Cans, $2.25) ALASKA PINK uy Salsnon 3 cans 33C (12 Cans ........... $1.29) PICKLES a o " , No. 10 Tins —-b CAN............ ........................... 4 o eu ELBO CUT Macaroni 20 COFFEES 5 pounds OO Airway 3 “t 59c : Nob HUI 3 ‘ -7Jc LIMA Edward's ip- Dependable 2 Lb. Cen 53c , Beans 10 Ib. 59c OF POULTRY AND EGGS M. M. Smith. Agent. Hermiston # LARD I SOAP Crystal White IO Bars 5 ---------- ----- ■ ■ ■ FLAPJACK Qc I Flour • ■ "Albers" Sheaf Brand Brand Sheaf Proportionately low round trip fores to other points MU' UNION PACIF. { TOUR OF UNITED STATES. lb. 33c lb. 49c Rolled Oats ======= $76 .80—Stand‘rd Sleepers UNION PACIFIC 4 LOCAL TEACHERS LEAVE ON Flour mshSsEtns" 4B.g $1.59 TEA Hmaer Hefte» th ne e» er Sample roundtrip fares to Chicago the more complete extension service book which provides convenient space for labor recorder summaries by enterprises, blanks for keeping possible income tax data adapted to Oregon's laws and other" material not provided for In the more abridg- ed AAA account book," Kuhlman concluded. County agents have copi SV of both kinds of books available in their lo­ cal offices. ---------- ---------------- — p* Bigger than Ever.’ i Corn Flakes Dining SUMMER CURSIOI FARES : W. W. Felthouse motored to En­ terprise, Or., the first of the week where he attended to business af- fairs. Alfred Quiring of the Herald staff is visiting relatives and friends in his former home at Dallas, Oregon. Mrs. F. H. Swick, who has been the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Edmond at Edmond’s Orchard be- low Umatilla the past week, re- turned to her home in Ridgefield, Wn., Saturday morning with Mr. Swick who is the fish inspector for the lower Columbia river, and for southwestern Washington. Mrs. Swick is a sister of Mrs. Edmonds. Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Hills of Grand Junction, Colorado, who have spent the past two weeks visiting friends in Hermiston, left last week for their home. Mr. Hills is with the U. S. Entomology Dept, and until a year ago was stationed at the Uma- tilla Experiment Station. While here they were the house guests of Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Morgan. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Richards, Mrs. L. F. Wooster, Nell Tate and Pat­ ricia Richards, all of Stanfield, at­ tended the Pomona grange meeting in Milton last Thursday. Mrs. Rich­ ards, county lecturer, had charge of the program. The main speaker was Herbert West of Walla Walla, who spoke in the interests of the inland Waterways association. 9.8 LB. BAG 8 IB PAIL Dr. A. C. Willcutt OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN & SURGEON SAFEWAY STORES