The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, March 14, 1935, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1935
FARM CO-OPERATIVE DIVISION
A
MESSAGE
POULTRY AND TURKEY
TO
UMATILLA GRANGE COUNCIL
PROBLEMS WILL BE DISCUSSED
Poultrymen will be interested in
knowing that G. C. Keeney, Man­
ager of the Pacific Cooperative Poul­
try Producers association of Port­
land, and J. C. Leedy, Manager of
Oregon Turkey Growers' Coopera­
tive of Portland, will be the speakers
at the Umatilla Protect Farm Bur­
eau meeting scheduled for Saturday
night, March 16, in the Union
church.
Mr. Keeney will discuss problems
on marketing poultry and poultry
products, and Mr. Leedy will give a
resume of the turkey outlook for
1935 regarding marketing, and will
give a summary of the 1934 opera­
tions.
Entertainment will include num­
bers by the local male quartet. W.
L. Hamm, E. D. Martin, W. J. Wog-
amott and Al Quiring, and a vocal
solo by Dan Linsay.
WILL MEET MARCH 23D.
The Umatilla County Grange
Council will hold a meeting in Pen­
dleton, Saturday, March 23, in the
county library at 10:00 o’clock. All
masters, lecturers, secretaries, Home
Economics club chairmen and agri­
cultural committee chairmen will
hold a group meeting. It is open to
all Grange members, and a special
invitation is given all members of
the new Grange at Westland, by
Mrs. L. W.) Owen, secretary of the
council.
—
Notice to All Granger».
The Farm Bureau Cooperative,
Grange Cooperative and Hermiston
Mercantile Cooperative are the only
institutions ip Hermiston whose
sales now count in the Grange Bul-
letlu contest. It is the duty of all
Grange members to support the in­
stitutions which support the Grange
MARCH 16 DEADLINE ON CORN­ Bulletin.
Signed. E. H DUNNING,
HOG CONTRACT SIGNATURES.
Bulletin contest representative,
Irrigon Grange.
Officers of the Umatilla County
R. G. Penney, Master,
Corn-Hog Production Association are
Stanfield Grange.
calling to the attention of hog pro­
ducers the fact that March 16 is the
St. Patrick’s Danne.
last day upon which the 1935 corn-
hog contract may be signed.
There will be a St. Patrick’s dance
The committee points out that in at the Stanfield Grange hall Friday
practically all cases it will be to the evening. March 15th, given by the
advantage of the persons who had ladies of the Home Economics club.
contracts last year to sign again. A fine of five cents will be charged
Some persons are withholding their all those who do not wear a small
signatures, but in general it is upon bit of green. Music by Mel’s Merry
the basis of misunderstanding of the Makers.
terms of the new contract, which in
several respects is more liberal than
CO-OP. GLEANINGS.
was the case last year.
One manner of liberalizing the
By Ed Dunning
contract is the granting of permis­
sion to buy and feed as many feeder (From ’Voice of the Self-Employed’)
America, entering upon the sixth
pigs as the contract signer may wish
there being no limit in the number winter of depression with teil mil­
lion
unemployed and other millions
of such pigs which may be fed.
Last year's contract signers, or on relief, may well envy Sweden,
farmers wishing to sign a contract where a condition of normal employ­
for the first time may contact their ment exists, the farmers are pros­
community committeemen or address pering, and little or no relief prob­
lem exists. The main reason Is that
the county agent.
Sweden has “gone co-operative” to
such an extent that purchasing pow­
ANOTHER FARM BUREAU
er is widely distributed. This is the
report of Howard A. Cowden, presi­
PROGRAM FOR MONDAY
dent of the Union Oil Company Co-
operative of North Kansas City, Mo.,
Another Farm Bureau program who recently visited that country.
has been arranged for Monday night, Similar results, Mr. Cowden was
March 18, In the Hermiston Union told, are being accomplished by co-
church, at 8:00 o'clock, when Prof. operation in Norway and Finland.
H. A. Scullen, assistant professor of Cooperative Finland was the only
entomology at O.S.C., will discuss country in Europe to pay its debt to
identification and control of com­ U. S. A.
mon insect pests.
In Sweden over half a million fa­
Prof. A. S. Burrier, assistant en­ milies belong to the consumers’ co­
tomologist, will discuss briefly the operative societies. These societies
results of the production cost sur­ operate 3500 cooperative stores, call­
vey conducted by the college.
ed “Konsums" located in every
A 3-reel movie will be shown by country hamlet as well as in every
Mr. Scullen entitled “The Realm of city. Stockholm alone has 150 co­
the Honey Bee,” which will in operative stores.
itself be both educational and enter­
To a large extent the farmers’
taining.
marketing co-ops deal directly with
Another feature on the program the consumers’ purchasing co-ops,
will be selections by the high school eliminating profit and waste in dis­
band, under the direction of Miss tribution. As a result, the farmers
Meredith Daily.
are prosperous. The farm buildings,
down to the chicken and hog houses,
are invariably well painted. Flowers
Beekeepers Will Meet.
and shrubbery surround the farm­
There will be a meeting of bee- steads. Electric transmission lines
keepers and those interested in bees, are everywhere, and three quarters
in the Hermiston City Library, at of all Swedish farms have electri­
1:30 P. M.. Monday, March 18.
city. A large proportion of the farm
H. A. Scullen, Associate Profes­ wives use electricity for cooking.
sor of Entomology at Oregon State This is made possible by the cheap­
college, will be present to discuss ness of electricity, which is genera­
factors affecting the cost of produc ted and distributed by both the gov­
Ing honey. A. S. Burrier, Associate ernment and cooperatives, working
Entemologist, will discuss the gen in harmony.
eral results of the honey cost studies
The Swedish consumers’ coopera-
which were completed a year age.
arn federated in a wholesale
Plenty of time will be given in tiros
called “Ko-operativa
this meeting to answer questions of cooperative
Farbundet,” (KF), or cooperation of
beekeepers and to talking over gen all
the necessities of life through its
eral problems relative to bees and member
co-ops. “KF” is a large
honey production.
manufacturer of tires, footwear,
fertilizers, flour, macaroni, baked
Farm Accounting Meeting.
goods, meat products, and many oth­
necessities. “KF" is also the edu­
The first of a series of AAA farm er
center of the Swedish Coop­
accounting meetings opened Tues- cational
night for the purpose of instructing erative movement.
The Swedish Cooperative leaders
those interested in the use of the
account books. Not more than ten showed great interest in the fact
e notified of a single meet- that a Co-op. tire was being made
der that individual assist- in the United States and took their
be given. Cards are mailed visitors to see the tire factory of KF
g notice of time and place at Gislaved. Three-hundred auto
ng, and requesting indivi- tires per day are made, and 200.000
• ra
bring inventory and notes, bicycle tires per year. One-third of
s of expenses and receipts all the tire business of Sweden Is
11 go in the book.
Co-operative.
L SUMMARY OF UMATILLA
No.
Herd
Cows
F. A. Baker .................. 21
C. M. Berry ................... 11
Alpha
Christley ........... 3«
Geo. Christy ..................
H. B. Darling ...........
J. L. Daugherty _____
John Denny ..................
E. H. Dunning
...... —
L. C. Dver ....................
B. B. Eastrfdge ............
T. G. Gregory _______
E. L. Jackson _______
Floyd Laird -----
Geo. Liebe .....................
Wm. Luttrell ------------
C. A. Lynch ..................
G. M. Madison .......
Enos Martin --------------
H. G. Moore _________
W. C. Morehouse __ ...
A. W. Moser ................
L. W. Owens ________
H. L. Payne______ __
P. J. Quinn _________
J. A. Reeves ...........
H J. Reid ..............
N. G. Robertson _____
C. R Smith --------------
H. Sommerer ________
A. W Turnblad ............
Geo. Wurster --------
8
10
13
10
10
9
12
81
8
10
6
1«
4»
7
7
12
4
15
17
4
«
4
37
10
11
5
8
7
HERD IMPROVEMENT ASS N.
Mo. on Total
test Milk
12 122,607
12
63.«73
12 230,772
«1.463
12
45,622
10
58,853
9
23,296
6
41.686
11
51,834
12
77,633
12
472.415
12
12
50.938
55.885
12
37,876
12
12 114.847
12 444.640
41,704
12
40,016
11
12
72.046
12
27,657
62,790
12
12 129,481
10
26.255
12
40,296
24.562
•
12 189.511
12
77,523
12
65,336
12
29,194
27,655
12
13
34,605
Ave
Milk
5451.7
5758.0
6366.5
7253.5
5183.8
4527.0
2329.6
5115.8
5892.9
5943.5
6374.6
6298.4
5366.8
6784.3
7370.9
9192.5
4010.6
7240.7
5891.8
6913.9
4894.3
6645.9
5199.1
6776.1
6140.3
5899.0
6643.4
6314.8
5838.8
7498.4
4817.6
Total
Fat
6620.7
2762.1
11284.5
3132.0
2377.3
2208.7
1345.8
1904.7
2928.5
2879.5
22133.3
2456.0
2789.1
1878.6
5335.0
15,638.4
2057.1
1925.5
3420.6
1393.5
2917.8
4989.6
1271.9
1943.7
895.0
9700.3
3496.3
2927.1
1608.8
1030.4
1875.4
Ave.
Fat
297.0
249.7
310.7
366.5
278.3
169.8
134.5
237.2
333.0
220.4
310.3
303.9
267.8
336 6
340.3
322.8
293.2
345.7
280.6
348.0
225.2
309.7
253 6
326.1
223.6
303.9
301.1
282.3
321.6
273.9
261.8
WHO is WHO
in PENDLETON
80
FOR RENT—110 ACRES HAY,
grain or pasture land; irrigated;
can be divided into three tracts near
Hermiston. E. P. Dodd, Hermiston.
29-ltp
EVERY MEMBER.
Developing Channel» of Enlightment
WANTED—JOB ON RANCH; MAN
and wife; no children; both ex­
perienced. Can give reference. In­
quire Herald Office.
29-2tp
FOR RENT—FARM OF 480 ACRES,
north slope, running water, part
river bottom. A fine place to raise
turkeys. Address H. M. Elder, Pen­
dleton, Oregon.
29-ltc
James R. Moore, Editor
Ohio Farm Bureau News
The function of the journalist in
the cooperative movement is more
important than the function of the
journalist in a private organization.
Cooperation has yet to be sold to
most of the people and it is through
publicity that most of this "selling"
will have to be done.
Cooperation, in this country, is
relatively new and somewhat un­
proved. It is operating on a com­
paratively small scale. Against the
forces of strongly organized and for­
midable big business, with its mil­
lion-dollar advertising budgets, its
intrenched powers and influence, the
lone cooperative, struggling for a
foothold, finds itself quite out-
weighed in the matter of influenc­
ing those whom it attempts to con­
vert—the public.
It Is my opinion that a carefully
organized system of publicity can do
much to change this situation. The
average man, were he fully acquain­
ted with the purposes and ideals of
cooperation, would prefer it to the
present system of competitive busi­
ness, which is today so sadly demor­
alized. Of all enterprises, the co-
operative movement has been almost
the only one that has grown steadi­
ly and noticeably during the depres-
sion. This is to be attribute« to the
fact that cooperation has demonstra-
ted its superiority over other sys­
tems and that people are taming
about it. Yet by far the majority
of people accept the old system. It
never occurs to them, in fact .that
any other method is possible. That
cooperation has but made a begin­
ning is due primarily to the tact
that it has scarcely made Itself
heard.
FOR SALE — KIMBALL PIANO.
Must be sold for balance due. We
have left on our hands beautiful
Kimball piano with balance of only
$97. You take over contract at $6
a month. For full information, and
where it may be seen address Cline
Piano Co., 1011 S. W. Washington
Street Portland, Ore.
29-3tc
LATHAM RED RASPBERRY
plants $2.50 hundred; Hardy, pro-
dactive and Mosaic immune, Lewis
Pearson, 1 mi. north.
28-2tp
RANCH FOR RENT — COLUMBIA
district. See Mrs. Belscamper.
28-tfc
FOR RENT—MODERN HOUSE FOR
small family, $10 per month:
Water furnished, W. T. Knapp, Her­
miston.
38-2tp
WANTED — HIGHEST PRICES
paid for cattle, hogs, sheep and
horses. Leave word Cochran’s Con­
fectionery or write Foster & Mc­
Closkey, Boardman, Ore.
28-4tp
INCUBATORS — EGG CAPACITY
of 60. 140, 440; Household furni­
ture and stoves needed. Hermiston
New & Second Hand Store.
28-tfc
WANTED PRACTICAL NURSING
by Mrs. C. J. Crosgrave, care J. R.
Oliver, Irrigon, Ore.
28-tfc
WE WANT RELIABLE YOUNG
men, with fair education, fore-
sight and mechanical inclination,
willing to train spare time or even­
ings to qualify as installation and
service experts in the refrigeration
and air conditioning industry. Write
fully giving age, exact address or
phone, and present occupation. CEI
—Hermiston Herald
29-ltc
"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"
Poultry Farm & Hatchery, Hermis­
ton, Oregon.
21-4tp
Prospering When Competition Fails.
The problem of educating the
great mass of American citizens to
cooperation is not an easy one. prin­
cipally because they have so long
lived in a system where private pro­
fit and production tor exchange are
accepted as the purposes of the sys­
tem. In a time of economic uncer­
tainty, such as we have witnessed
during the last four years, this great
mass of people is more receptive to
an idea that will restore their lost
security. In such times cooperation
tends to grow and private business
tends to slump. It succeeds in times
of adversity, when private endeavor
does not. The success of our exist­
ing cooperatives can be duplicated
if a sufficient appeal is made to the
public, through an extensive system
of publicity designed to enlighten
people on the principles of a move­
ment that can succeed when capital­
ism fails.
fluenced to give the same support
if they are given the information
necessary. And when that time
comes we will find ourselves in the
midst of a profound economic change
—a change that promises to bring
ownership back to the people.
i « »
"Every Fanner a Cooperator.”
fessional People This News­
paper Recommends to You—
Auto Clearing House
BEST SERVICE AND BODY
—Quality Men's Wear—
DEPT. IN EASTERN OREGON
FLORSKEIM SHOES
Glass Replaced
Auto Parts
“We Keep Upkeep Down”
718 Main Street
«26 Cottonwood St. - Phone 38
DR. DALE ROTHWELL
CORRECT GLASSES
At Reasonable Prices
Optometrist & Optician
Over Woolworths
Phone 535J
REDUCED PRICES—
SOMETHING—
UNUSUAL—
AT—
HOENCK
TAILOR SHOP
BREIER 1935
Pendleton Music House
DR. H. A. NEWTON
PHONE 12
DENTIST
FEEBLER Bldg.
Realistic Beauty Shop
A Good Place to Buy
Used Cars and Trucks.
SERVICE
SALES
DENNIS MOTOR CO.
PENDLETON
PHONE 526
Thews & Ryder Tin Shop
Balcony Glenn's Pharmacy
— Phone 424 —
Warm Air Heating & Ventilating
Sheet Metal Works
All Classes of Sheet Metal Work
129 West Alta
Phone 705
SERVICE CLEANERS
FRED H. BROWN
MAMIE SAMPSON
L. E. Thorne, Proprietor
Cleaning - Pressing - Alterations
Have Your Cleaning Done
“The KAR-TET Way"
519 Main St. -We Deliver- Tel. 76
LOCALLY OWNED
NATIONALLY KNOWN
“Shoes for the Entire Family"
JEWELER
— 817 MAIN STREET —
BOONE BEAUTY SHOPPE
PIANOS RADIOS
MAY-TAG WASHER
KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR
Oregon
Pendleton
Buster Brown Shoe Store
Pendleton
All Branches Beauty Work
Per. Waves $3.50 and $5.00
743 Main St.
Phone 1050
THE H & H SHOP
DR. A. G. BAUMEISTER
JAMES R. FERGUSON
MINNIE M. HENDERSON, Prop.
Hemstitching - Baby Articles
Children’s Wearing Apparel
740 Main St.
Phone 601
A-l Furniture Hospital
725 Main Street
Palmer-Chiropractor
Neurocalometer Service
Cuboid Arch Supports
104 First NatT. Bk. Bldg.
Telephone 730J
AUGUST NOREEN
Repair and Upholstering
Mattress Renovating
Work Done at Portland Prices
Estimates Given Free
310 West Webb
Phone 816J
TAILOR
Alterations - Cleaning & Pressing
—Sults Made to Order—
Phone 688-J
6451 Main St.
OREGON CAFE
YOUR ONLY
A STRANGER ONCE
AT
MEALS AT ALL HOURS
Steaks - Chop Suey - Noodles
Bring your friends here and show
them what you consider the
best cafe in the city.
632 Main Street
Phone 605
BANISH PILES FOREVER
Guaranteed or Your Money Baek
Latest Scientific Proven Method
Lowie Foyson, of Steelton, Pa.,
took a large black bass from the Sus­
quehanna river on a hook baited
with a chockroach.
OSTEOPATHIC
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
APPAREL FOR WOMEN
Channels of Enlightment.
OSBORN APARTMENTS
724 MAIN STREET
A. W. CHRISTOPHERSON
Will M. Peterson
Raley Peterson
Charles A. Peterson
Special articles are written to
newspapers or magazines upon re-
quest. One large Ohio newspaper
has printed a series of articles in its
Sunday editions on Cooperation in
Ohio that was supplied by us. We
supply articles for other cooperative
publications, as well as trade papers
of any sort We also encourage each
of our county Farm Bureau units to
issue a small, four Dare newspaper
each month for the benefit of mem­
bers in particular counties We send
out a monthly bulletin of material
suitable for use In these county pa­
pers The remainder of the paper
is to be filled with local news.
We reach another large class of
people by the radio. We have a reg­
ular haU-hour weekly broadcast over
station WI W. Cincinnati, and a dai­
ly broadcast of half an hour over
station WAIH. Columbus.
Anv degree of effective publicity:
of course, depends on a well trained
and canable staff. Cooperative or-
ganization budgets too often neglect
publicity and as a consenience many
of the potential possibilities of co­
operation are not realized.
More and more it is becoming evi- .
dent that cooperation offers the best
wav out for a nation economically
sick. We find religious agencies,
churches and church groups, econo­
mists and colleges supporting ft.
These are the people who have been
enlightened on the subject. There.
is no reason. In my opinion, why the
public In general could not be in- |
Reliable Business and Pro­
HYATT and BRAWN
In our own cooperatives, affiliated
with the Ohio Farm Bureau, under
which are organized cooperative
automobile and fire insurance com­
panies. cooperative purchasing and
marketing associations, and coop­
erative credit associations, we have
attempted to make every fanner a
cooperator. The extent to which we
have succeeded is indicated by the
fact that in eight years our automo­
bile insurance company has grown
to a 31 million dollar company,
Insuring more than 135,000 cars.
Our cooperative marketing and pur­
chasing associations have an outlet
in nearly every county in Ohio, sup­
plying our farmers with petroleum
products, machinery, coal, food. seed,
paint, fence, twine, harness, etc., on
a cooperative basis. Our business
has grown every year. We have bad.
of course, something tangible to of­
fer them, but we bave also let them
know about It.
Our monthly magazine, the Ohio
Farm Bureau News, goes to every
member of our organization. It is a
thirty-two pare publication to which
both authorities on cooperation and
our leading members contribute. It
is put out to be read and not simply
admired and has converted many
luke-warm farmers into enthusias­
tic cooperators.
Our weekly press service is sent
to each of Ohio’s 500 newspapers
The results are checked In our office
by a clipping service and we have
been very much satisfied by the co­
operation given us by editors.
Dr. R. B. Brundage
Bond Bldg.-Room 14
DO YOU NEED PEP?
Walter C. Moore of 2042
N. W. Upshur St, Portland.
Ore., said: “When I would
become rundown and had no
appetite or energy, mother
would give me Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery.
We always use it in the
spring, for the blood. It also
helps to relieve stomach dis­
tress, such as indigestion and gas on the
stomach, and it gives a person a fine appetite.’*
Write to Dr. Pierce’s Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y.»
for free medical advice.
A Classified Directory of
Phone 148
WHO IS
GADWA ?
PENNEY'S
J
C
PITNEY COMPANY, Incorporated
Pendleton, Oregon.
SHOP & SAVE
* Kent’s Cafe *
‘‘Smiling Associated Service”
Phone 197J
East Court & Mill
Stephen’s Luncheonette
O. O. STEPHENS, Manager
PHONE 357
737 MAIN ST.
Kennedy’s 5c to $1 Store
HARDWARE - NOVELTIES
626 MAIN STREET
NOTIONS
Long Radiator Shop
W. M. RAKESTRAW
New and Used Radiators
Expert Radiator Cleaning
and Repairing
—701 East Alta Street—
When In Town Ask for Rainier!
"In the West It's Rainier"
BILL DAVIS, Distributor
722 Cottonwood St
Pendleton
Dependable Used Cars - Trucks
OLSEN - KING, INC.
WATCH REPAIRING :
JEWELER
627 Main Street
BONDED
-
-
INSURED
Portland - Pendleton
Motor Freight, Inc.
Personal Service
Hermiston
Pendleton
Phone 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
Holdman Auto Service
W. L. Morgan, D. M. D.
General Dentistry
X-Ray and Diagnosis
Bank Bldg.
Phone 9-3
Residence Phons 25-J
Bunday and Evenings by
Appointment
| Dr. A. C. Willcutt
t
Physician and Surgeon.
—
Bank Building
Office Houri
—
—
9-12 and 2-5
W. F. MAHRT
Delco Light Plants, Pumps,
Radio and Appliances
719 Garden Street - Pendleton
SIMPSON’S
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Pendleton, Oregon
Legion Hall.
Phone 131
“OLD MASTER BEER'
Established 1882
Pendleton
Murphey Paint Co. Inc.
121 E. Court St.
Phone 318
Wall Paper - Paints - Oils
Varnishes - Picture Frames
Contracts and Job Work ■
P. O. Box 81
Pendleton. Oregon
"Home Owned and Operated.”
BUTTERNUT BREAD
SOCIETY CAKES
320 East Court
Phone 122
Dooley’s 5c to $1.00 Store
TROY Twasort LAUNDRY
BREADS AND PASTRIES
Meets first and third
Legion Auxil­
iary meets second and
fourth Thursday.
PURITY BAKERY
«32 Main
Wm. Roesch Brewing Co.
SUNLITE BAKERY, Inc.
Attorney-at-Law
Hermiston - Oregon
Hermiston Post No. 37
There is no substitute for
“PURITY QUALITY"
Cottonwood and Alta
Pendleton Iron Works
Pendleton Baking Co.
CHIROPRACTOR
Office: Two doors want post office
Office Hours: 8 to 13 - 1:80 to «
Phone 481------- Hermiston, Ore.
American Tire Shop
CLYDE M. PERKINS, Prop.
Lawn Mower Sharpening.
Bicycle Repairing and
Phonograph Work;
Guaranteed Vulcanizing.
721 Garden Street.
COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE
General Repair & Foundry Work
Electric and Acetylene Welding
Hydrogen Irrigation Pumps
East Alta Street
W. J. WARNER
DR. A. E. MARBLE
LADIES READY-TO-WEAR
SHOES - and BEAUTY SHOP
—807 Main Street—
Telephone 80
813 Main Street
Novelties - Notions
Dry Goods - Hardware
HERB GREEN, Jeweler
EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING
707 Main Street
Phone 179
«08 Garden St.
MON. - WED. - FRI.
BLUE MOUNTAIN
PRODUCE CO. INC
Phone 242
Cash Buyers of Poultry. Eggs,
Cream, Veal, and Hogs.
«18 Garden Street
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