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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1935)
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1985 Used Cars FARM CO-OPERATIVE DIVISION JA MESSAGE TO & TRUCKS MEMBER. EVERY 1931—CHEVROLET COACH $35000 ECHO WHITE OWL GRANGE CORN-HOG CHECKS RECEIVED t FOR DISTRIBUTION IN COUNTY. HOLDS REGULAR MEETING Corn-Hug Allotment checks in the amount cf 86.246.36 have been re ceived by the Umatilla County Corn- Hog Production Control Association for distribution within the county, These checks involve a large major- ity of the persons to whom pay- ments ere due for the second part of the 1034 adjustment program. The contracts for the 1935 Corn- Hog program are now available, and a series of meetings is to be held for the purpose of distributing these checks and giving consideration to signng of new contracts. Following Is a sci edule of these meetings. At the regular meeting of the White Owl Grange of Echo Thurs day, February 7, the organization went on record as opposing the Co unty Unit School bill. First and sec ond degrees were also given to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Helms and Mrs. M. K. George. A short program was enjoyed, as follows: A history of the club was given by Mrs. B. H. Fix; a reading by Mary Wimer; pantomime "A Home Scene” by Lloyd L. Fix, Hel en Fix and Little Bernice Fox, with Mrs. Ashwith at the piano, and a reading by Mrs. Roscoe Myers. It was also reported at the meet ing that the Home Economics club met at the home of Mrs. Lloyd Fix last Friday and planned a benefit ard party for February 15. Bridge. '500" and pinochle will be in play nd door prizes will be given. Play- ng will start at 8:00 p. m. in the O.O.F. hall, it was reported. The rest meeting of the club will be at the home of Mrs. Roscoe Myers. Hermiston— Public Library, 10:00 A. M„ Fri- day. February 15. Pendleton— Fede ral Court Room on second floor of Post Office Building, 10:00 A. M., Saturday, February I, 10:00 A. M., Monday, 18. ASPARAGUS GROWERS of the meetings >e an explanation of the the 1935 Corn-Hog con- opportunity will be given for the asking of questions regard ing this enterprise. Immediately af ter that part of the program there will be an opportunity for persons tn sirn the new contracts, at which time there will be a distribution of the hecks covering the second pay ment under the 1934 contract. A few of the second payment checks have not arrived for the reason that som of the contracts were held up a longer time than were others. Hov ever, all those persons for whom the 'hecks are available will be giv- « n the money due on the second pay- mot t. very 1934 corn-hog contract sir "er, and those who have not sinned the 1934 corn-hog contract b + are interested in the new sign- - are invited to attend the meet- in in this district. The renuire- mints for signing will be explained a the meetings. Y SUPPLIED INFORMATION. The rapid increase in interest in asparagus production in the vicinity of Athena is responsible for the sup plying of the following Information by the Hermiston Herald regarding this crop. The following discussion has been provided by the county agent upon the basis of information supplied by the head of the Depart ment of Vegetable Crops at Oregon State College. The county agent is authority for the statement that ad ditional Information and assistance will be provided persons interested in producing this crop. An average distance between rows of asparagus grown for green grass is 5 to 6 feet. The average distance between the plants In the row is 24 inches. In some of the larger Cali fornia plantings the spacings vary between 18 and 20 Inches in the row, but more recently growers have been spacing 24 inches, according to Professor Bouquet of O. S. C. CC-OPFRATIVE SERVICE STATION HERMISTON, OREGON Balance Sheet, as of Dec. 30, 1934. Assets : CURRENT & TRADING: Cash on hand and In bank ........... Petty Cash Fund .............................. Accounts Receivable ......................... Merchandise Inventories ................ $ FIXED: Buildings and Land ..................... $ Less Allow, for Depreciation — 800.94 1.64 .99 1,333.28 675.10 57.80 617.30 Service Station Equipment ........... 1,124.44 66.39 Less Allow, for Depreciation .... 1,058.05 324.50 15.51 308.99 Office Equipment ............................ - Less Allow, for Depreciation .... $2,136.85 1,984.34 DEFERRED CHARGES: Unexpired Insurance .................. 20.78 4,141.97 Liabilities CURRENT LIABILITIES: Accounts Payable .......................... Patronage Dividend Due Custom rs Farm Bureau Cooperative Account 282.33 333.14 3,130.01 3,745.48 396.49 4,141.97 FARM BUREAU CO-OPERATIVE OF HERMISTON, OREGON. Balance sheet as of Dec. 31, 1834. ASSETS CURRENT & TRADING. Cash on hand and in bank ........... Outstanding Loans to Cooperatives Accounts Receivable ......................... Prepaid Grain Contracts(«ecured) Merchandise Inventories ------------ $ 1,290.51 6,137.51 190.09 321.91 16,710.16 FIXED. Buildings ............................................... $17,188.70 Less Allowance for Depreciation .. 4,109.13 Machinery & Equipment ........ — Less Allowance for Depreciation 4,994.75 2,527.93 Office Equipment .............................. Less Allowance for Depreciation .. 1,193.00 708.12 *24,650.18 In growing asparagus for cutting and canning. the earliness of the season is not such a vital factor as when the crop is grown for fresh I marketing. The crowns must be I down deep so that the field can be I gone over in the spring with cither horse or tractor, disk, harrow, etc., to fit the field for the spring cutting season. Plants are usually shipped when in dormant state, that is before the stalks have started to grow from the crown buds. The stocks which grew in the early spring are subject to being injured by frost, and so while early planting is desirable to get the plants started in proper moisture, there is still the danger that the stocks may be killed by later frosts It should be realized that it the stocks are growing when plants are shipped or otherwise handled, that much foliage growth for the first season is spoiled for the reason that the plants may be broken off or stocks frosted. It should . e kept in mind that the first year 3 stocks and tops are valuable in building up re serve food supplies for future years. The point In this connection is that growers should, it at all possible, secure dormant plants and set them in that condition. 2,466.82 484.88 16,031.27 440.22 41,121.67 LIABILITIES CURRENT. Accounts Payable ----------------------- Overcharge Due Members .............. Accrued Taxes ---------- ------ -............. Umatilla Project Farm Bureau Fees Declared Returns on Year 1925 2% Certificates Unclaimed —;---------- CAPITAL * RESERVE FOR EMERGENCY. Capital Revolving Fund ------------ Reserve for Emergency -------------- 2,762.82 1.84 178.18 10.00 57.73 26,961.43 11,149.67 Auto Clearing House HYATT and BRAWN $240° —Quality Men's Wear— 1930—FORD -A- PANEL 718 Main Street FLORSHEIM Glass Replaced Auto Parts “We Keep Upkeep Down" SHOES 626 Cottonwood St. - Phone 38 $Î1OW BEST SERVICE AND BODY DEPT. IN EASTERN OREGON A Good Place to Buy Used Cars and Trucks. SALES 1927—HASH “6" COUPE $1000 In using large farm equipment, it is possible to furrow out two rows at a time by having an extension or wing attachment to the moldboard plows pulled by tractor or other power. The soil type will determine to some extent the depth ( planting. ín a soil of good avern o texture (sandy or silt loam) the 1 sual depth of setting the crowns is 10 inches. | It the soil is a fairly light, sandy i loam, 12 inches would probably be just as good as 10 inches. The sup position is that the crowns rise some , what with age. and they would be more likely to do so if the soil were light. WHO Is WHO in PENDLETON A Classified Directory of Reliable Business and Pro- fessionai People This News paper Recommends to You- 1927—FORD -T- TUDOR $5000 1929— DODGE “8” TRUCK $18500 1929— FORD -A- TRUCK DR. DALE ROTHWELL CORRECT GLASSES At Reasonable Prices Optometrist & Optician Over Woolworths Phone 535J REDUCED PRICES— SOMETHING— UNUSUAL— AT— DENTIST DENNIS MOTOR CO. PEEBLER Bldg. PHONE 12 MAMIE SAMPSON Balcony Glenn’s Pharmacy • — Phone 424 — ROHRMAN Motor Co. BREIER 1935 SERVICE CLEANERS L. E. Thorne, Proprietor Cleaning - Pressing - Alterations Have Your Cleaning Done "The KAR-TET Way” 519 Main St. -We Deliver- Tel. 76 PHONE 571 HERMISTON, OREGON Pendleton Music House WANT ADS DR. H. A. NEWTON Realistic Beauty Shop HOENCK TAILOR SHOP $150 00 PIANOS RADIOS MAY-TAG WASHER KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR Pendleton - - Oregon LOCALLY OWNED NATIONALLY KNOWN “Shoes for the Entire Family” Buster Brown Shoe Store 725 Main Street Pendleton OVER WASHING MACHINE FOR trade—With or without engine. S. 24-3tp L. Carson. MINNIE M. HENDERSON, Prop, HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE— $25 and up; 6 mi. S. E. of Herm- 25-2tp iston, Ray Dunham. Hemstitching - Baby Articles Children’s Wearing Apparel 740 Main St. - - Phone 601 TWO-HORSE CULTIVATOR; SING- er sewing machine; Majestic ra dio, $10; Davenport. Hermiston New 23-tfc & Second Hand Store. A-l Furniture Hospital AUGUST NOREEN Repair and Upholstering Mattress Renovating Work Done at Portland Prices Estimates Given Free 310 West Webb - Phone 816J TAILOR LOST—ARMY BLANKET, FROM car Tuesday morning. Mrs. Hen ry Hooker, Hermiston. 25-ltp "VIGORBILT" CHICKS—LET YOUR local hatchery supply your 1935 extra quality Leghorns. Also heavy breeds. Let’s talk it over, and order early. Custom hatching. “Vigorbilt” Po Eltry Farm & Hatchery, Hermis- 21-4tp ton, Oregon. Another thing about plants is their size, grade, etc., and these points vary greatly. Small plants have a poor root system, weak crowns and buds, and weigh light compared with larger plants that are just the opposite, Eastern as paragus growers grade into three si- Window Put in Live Cow’s Side. zes, based on weight per thousand plants. Good average roots there CORVALLIS—A cow with a win we gh 75 to 85 pounds for each dow in her stomach so that the act thousand plants: very good 100 to 150, while the smaller roots go down ion may be observed directly Is used to 50 pounds per thousand. The best in clases In physiology in the vet- plants come from pedigreed, not erinary department at Oregon State field run seed. college. The cow Is alive and In setting the plants, it should be healthy and is not disturbed by the the aim of the g rower to place them at uniform distance, and care should fact that her Interior can be revealed be used to sec that the plants are by the simple removal of a rubber not covered deeper than is the cus Plug. tomary depth at first, the filling in The operation on the cow that will come later. made the "window” possible, Is not One grower in the vicinity of Ath new to science but this is believed ena asked about the possibility of growing crops between the rows of to be the only cow thus “equipped" asparagus while the latter were de on the Pacitic coast, says Dr. B. T. veloping. The State College Ve e- Simms, head of the department. Dr. table Crop Department expresses the O. H. Muth and Dr. F. M. Bolin, as- idea that some crors could be so produced, but the question of utili- sistant veterinarians, did the work zation or marketing should be given on the cow used here. consideration. Dwarf peas might be all right for that purpose. In some The United States Weather Bur- places in California they "Se pota- etc. On the other hand. ean reports that July, 1934, was the ...... hottest month since 1874. some growers do not .................. like intercrop ping for the reason that in the long a hen abandoned her brood run such program might be a factor on After the C. S. Henderson farm, near in reducing the output from the Effingham, Ill., an old rooster came paragus plants. In some cases, to the reecue and has since been however, It may be an economic mothering” the motherless chicks. necessity to intercrop. The fertility of the soil would be of impr tanca In determining the answer to this question. W L. Morgan, D. M. D The County Agent has indicated I General Dentistry that his office will be glad to be of X-Ray and Diagnosta any possible assistance In connec tion with the development cf plant- Phone 9-J Bank Bldg. Ings of new crops and every effort Residence Phone 25-J will be made to provide growers with unday and Evenings by the latest and most reliable informa-1 tion. Appointment DR. A. G. BAUMEISTER THE H & H SHOP YOUR ONLY A STRANGER ONCE AT OREGON CAFE Dr. R. B. Brundage Phone 148 PENNEY'S ■ J, c PENNEY COMPANY, Incorporated Pendleton, Oregon. W. F. MAHRT Delco Light Plants, Pumps, Radio and Appliances 719 Garden Street - Pendleton SIMPSON’S APPAREL FOR WOMEN 724 MAIN STREET FRED H. BROWN JEWELER — 817 MAIN STREET — BOONE BEAUTY SHOP All Branches Beauty Work Per. Waves $3.50 and $5.00 Phone 1050 743 Main St. JAMES R. FERGUSON “Smiling Associated Service” East Court & MIU Phone 197J Stephen’s Luncheonette O. O. STEPHENS, Manager 737 MAIN ST. - PHONE 357 Kennedy’s 5c to $1 Store W. M. RAKESTRAW WATCH REPAIRING - Pendleton Dependable Used Cars - Trucks SHOP & SAVE Warm Air Heating & Ventilating Sheet Metal Works All Classes of Sheet Metal Work Phone 705 129 West Alta New and Used Radiators Expert Radiator Cleaning and Repairing —701 East Alta Street— 722 Cottonwood St ■ Thews & Ryder Tin Shop Long Radiator Shop BILL DAVIS, Distributor GADWA? PENDLETON 626 MAIN STREET When in Town Ask for Rainier! “In the West It’s Rainier” WHO IS PHONE 526 HARDWARE - NOVELTIES i ‘ NOTIONS - Kent’s Cafe ■ BANISH PILES FOREVER Guaranteed or Your Money Back Latest Scientific Proven Method Bond Bldg.-Room 14 Palmer-Chiropractor Neurocalometer Service Cuboid Arch Supports 104 First NatT. Bk. Bldg. Telephone 730J Alterations - Cleaning & Pressing —Suits Made to Order— 645 % Main St. - Phone 688-J MEALS AT ALL HOURS Steaks - Chop Suey - Noodles Bring your friends here and show them what you consider the best cafe in the city. Phone 605 632 Main Street o SERVICE OLSEN - KING, INC. -: JEWELER 627 Main Street BONDED - INSURED - Portland - Pendleton Motor Freight, Inc. Personal Service Pendleton Hermiston Pilone 369 Phone 852 PAY LESS FOR DRUGS Complete Line of Veterinary Remedies —For Information— Dodge - Plymouth - Packard 24-Hour Service on Everything for Your Car—Tel. 963. GLENN’S PHARMACY The Cinderella Shop Hold man Auto Service LADIES READY-TO-WEAR SHOES - and BEAUTY SHOP COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE —807 Main Street— Cottonwood and Alta American Tire Shop CLYDE M. PERKINS, Prop. Lawn Mower Sharpening. Bicycle Repairing and Phonograph Work; Guaranteed Vulcanizing. 721 Garden Street. Wm. Roesch Brewing Co. “OLD MASTER BEER" Established 1882 - Pendleton Cannery-Laundry Meeting. 13,079.57 DEFERRED EXPENSE ITEM. Insurance, unexpired --------- A meeting of the members of the Hermiston Co-operative Laundry 8 Cannery has been called for Satur day, February 23, 1935, at 2:00 p. m.. In the city library, lor the purpose of electing three director and transacting such other business as may come before the mec ting. A quorum was not present at the annual meeting, and as a result no business was conducted. CATHERINE SOMMERER, Sec. (Feb. 7-14) Annual Meeting of the Hermiston 3,010.57 38,111.10 41,121.67 NOTE: “Outstanding loans to Co-operative«" are loans to the local not a cash creamery and service station; "Reserve for Emergency' reserve. I, Chas. Taylor, hereby certify, that to the best of my knowledge and belief, the above statement as shown by the books of the Farm Bureau Co-operative ia true and correct. 1930—FORD -A- ROADSTER toes, carrots, CAPITAL * SURPLUS: Surplus ......................... > Closely planted beds yield the | largest crops while the bed is young, but alter the first two or three years of cutting the spears not as large as where the plants are spaced farther apart. At 5 feet by 24 inch es there would be approximately 4,356 plants per acre, while at 6 feet by 24 inches there would be 3,630. It is apparent, then, that the check row system is not practical. PAGE THREF CHAS. TAYLOR, Auditor Mercantile Co-operative. The annual meeting of the Her miston Mercantile Co-operative will be held Friday evening, February 15th. in the basement room of the Hermiston Public Library, at 8:00 P. M. Eleet ion of directors, amendments to by-laws and other business will constitute the program for the even- Ing. All members are urgently reques ted to be present. A W CHRISTOPHERSON Physician and Surgeon. ? Bank Building — Î Office Hours I » — 9-12 and 2-5 Will M. Peterson Raley Peterson Charles A. Peterson ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Pendleton, Oregon SUNL1TE BAKERY, Inc. Pendleton, Oregon "Home Owned and Operated.” BUTTERNUT BREAD SOCIETY CAKES 3 20 East Court Phone 122 Dooley’s 5c to $1.00 Store TROY TWator LAUNDRY Attorney-at-Law BREADS AND PASTRIES A E MARBLE CHIROPRACTOR Office: Two doors west post office OtHce Hours Phone 481 8 to 12 - 1:30 to 6 Hermiston, Ore Hermiston P st No. 37 Meets first and third I bursday. Legion Auxil iary meets second and fourth Thursday. Phone 131 Pendleton Iron Works Pendleton Baking Co. DR PURITY BAKERY 632 Main Murphey Paint Co. Inc. 121 E. Court St. Phone 318 Wall Paper - Paints - Oil« Varnishes - Picture Frames - Contracts and Job Work • General Repair * Foundry Work Electric and Acetylene Welding Hydrogen Irrigation Pumps East Alta Street W. J. WARNER Hermiston - Oregon There is no substitute for "PURITY QUALITY" Telephone 80 P. O. Box 81 813 Main Street Novelties - Notions Dry Goods - Hardware | HERB GREEN, Jeweler EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING 707 Main Street Phone 179 608 Garden St. MON. - WED. - FRI. BLUE MOUNTAIN PRODUCE CO. INC. 618 Garden Street Phone 242 Cash Buyers of Poultry. Eggs, Cream, Veal, and Hogs. Hawkinson Tread Service 505 East Court St. Phone 170 Cyril J. Kruger, Manager NEW MILES FOR OLD! Why retire your tires while they are still young? Pendleton’s Wine Store HIGH GRADE WINES Next Door to Hotel Pendleton SOL BAUM. Prop. Phone 589