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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1935)
THURSDAY, APRIL FARM CO-OPERATIVE A MESSAGE 9 TO EVERY MEMBER. WANT ADS 5-ROOM MODERN HOUSE FOR rent. H. E. Hanby. 33-tfc WOMAN WANTS WORK—BY DAY or hour. Inquire Herald office. MANAGING DIRECTOR OF FCA WILL DISCUSS CREDIT UNION. NOTICE TO MANAGERS AND DI RECTORS OF ALL COOPERATIVES AND GRANGE OFFICIALS. PAGE THREP THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON it, 1985 NOTICE TO MEMBERS. A revision of the membership list has been completed this week in order to start the new sub scription year for the Hermiston Herald, and any person who is not in good standing in some farm organization will not receive the paper this week. As soon as the delinquency has been adjusted the name will again be placed upon the subscription list. If the name of a subscriber who is eligible to receive the paper has been left off the list, the er ror will be cheerfully corrected. Your organization should be noti fied immediately of any necessary change and the adjustment«will be made. WHAT NATIONAL ORGANIZATION ONE 2-WHEEL TRAILER; ONE 4- wheel trailer; Range stove, fur HAS ACCOMPLISHED FOR niture. Her. New & Second Hand DAIRY COOPERATIVES Store. INDIAN RUNNER DUCKS. EGGS, or trio wanted. Write Mrs. R. B. As the eighteenth annual conven Wilcox. Rt. 1. Hermiston. tion of the National Cooperative Milk Producers’ Federation opens in FOR SALE OR TRADE—ONE BAY Syracuse, the family of dairy coop work horse for cattle or hogs. At 8:00 P. M. Saturday evening, eratives comprising this Federation Foster & McClaskey, Boardman, Ore- April 13th, there will be a meeting numbers 54 affiliated associations, gon. 33-ltp of unusual importance to the offi marketing all of the dairy products cials of all cooperatives and granges. of more than 350,000 dairy families. HIGH SCHOOL GIRL WANTS WORK Several matters pertaining to all These families live In 43 States, and on Saturdays. Can give references. cooperatives will be discussed, and 33-ltp a survey just completed by the Farm inquire Herald office. Edgar Zehrung, district managing Credit Administration places the director for the Credit Union Divi present value df their marketable WHITE PEKIN DUCK EGGS FOR sion of the Farm Credit Administra Sale—$1.50 for setting of 15. At - ' 250 dairy products at approximately 32-8tp tion, will explain the Federal Credit the house. Joe Reeves. million dollars per year. Union and its application to farm the FOR SALE — 20-ACRE PLACE, The incidents connected with cooperatives. launching of the Federation are buildings; Also team mules, wag All of the above mentioned offi among the most Interesting in my on and harness. 1 Mile East Mer cials are urgently requested to be memory. There are some In this aud- ril Potter. John Ulrich. 32-2tp present. ience who also remember vividly the exciting events of that historic sum BABY CHICKS—TWO HATCHES NOTICE. CLEAN-UP DAY APRIL 15 mer of 1916 when the milk produ each week. Large or small orders. cers supplying many of the greater Started chicks. Come, see what you AT COLUMBIA PARK. milk sheds of this country almost buy. "Vigorblit” Hatchery, Hermis- MEMBERS OF THE UMATILLA CO- 31-tfc Another clean-up day has been simultaneously brought Into being a ton. Ore. OPERATIVE CREAMERY. planned for Monday, April 15, as all number of bargaining associations, STRAWBERRY PLANTS FOR SALE the work was not finished last Fri and sought from distributors recog Marshall’s Improved Oregon Pre nition of their right to bargain col day. miers; 1 c each. Joe Dyer, Phone In order that there be no misun Trimming of trees and repairin? lectively. 78R. 31-tfc derstanding of prices paid for -the of fences and ditches generally com Those present who were active in last half of March, please consider pletes the work each year, but this that movement recall the almost SALE — THE BELSCAMPER that the price of 92 score butter has year additional work was planned concerted eforts on their part and FOR ranch. Columbia district, Hermis- advanced 3 1 cents per pound and such as, an out-door fire place, r the milk wars which inevitably fol 31-tfe butterfat 5 cents per pound since turn gate, a shrubbery garden and lowed, consummating in a general ton. the first of April. Prices on checks planting of trees. recognition by distributors of the APARTMENTS FOR RENT— OPPO- distributed this week were based on site Depot. Mrs. A. Carter. 31-tfc Perhaps some who could not come right of farmers to organize and sell prices received for butter sold dur last Friday will find Monday a more 1 milk, or its products, through agen RANCH FOR RENT — COLUMBIA ing the second half of March. cies or organizations of their own day. An advance of three cents is effec convenient district. See Mrs. Belscamper. Please bring any hardy shrubbery choosing and to negotiate prices to tive on April 9. according to official you may have, such as: lilac, spiraea, be paid association members. 28-tfc Portland produce exchange quota mock orange or syringa. Iris will FOR RENT — MODERN HOUSE FOR tions. Birth of the Federation. also be used. small family, 310 per month: This park Is a very pleasant place It was In the early winter of 1916 Water furnished, W. T. Knapp, Her- CROP LOAN BLANKS READY during the hot summer with • its that 31-ltp the Fourth National Conference miston. dense shade, and” is well worth a on Marketing and Farm Credits was AT COUNTY AGENT OFFICES HIGHEST PRICES couple of days work in the spring. scheduled to be held tn Chicago. WANTED There will be another pot luck paid for cattle, hogs, sheep and This conference had become the most horses. dinner. Leave word Cochran’s Con- Application for emergency crop forward-looking gathering of leaders Signed, The PARK BOARD. or write Foster & Mc- production loans for 1935 may be of agriculture in any movement in fectionery 28-4tp made at the office of County Agent this country at that time. In fact Closkev. Boardman, Ore. EADIINE FOR ABORTION Holt in tPendleton, or of Assistan this conference was really the fore- County Agent Sawyer in Hermiston, runner of the present American In • • ❖ • •*•*•****9 announces Wm. L. Teutsch, assist ESTING SIGN-UP APRIL 18 stitute of Cooperation which, after t COLUMBIA NEWS t ant county agent leader, who has re a lapse of years and with more defi cently conferred with representa By MARIJANE HAMMER. Dr. R. R. Reeve, federal veterin nite application to cooperative prob tives from the emergency crop loan arian making Bang's disease tests of lems, has carried on in a much more Mr. and Mrs. Dave Thoyce of Hun office of the farm credit administra dairy herds in this district, announ- significant way the conception of an tington, and Miss Bridle McGonlgle tion In Spokane. Such loans are now ned this week that April 16, will be open forum for the discussion of na of Portland, visited at the McGon available to Oregon farmers. the deadline for further sign-ups tional policies and the technical pro lgle home Friday. Mrs. Thoyce and The loans are authorized to be for herds. Plans are being made for blems of the agricultural cooperative Miss McGonlgle are Mr. McGonigle's made to farmers for "fallowing, the the second teet on herds where re movement. daughters. production and harvesting of crops, actors have been found, and after At this conference one of the fea Guests at the John Conrad home and feed for livestock" under the that test is completed there will be terms of the act which was passed no opportunity for any new sign-up. tures was a special section devoted Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Dunham, to the problems of fluid milk mar Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Addleman and by Congress February 20, 1935, Any keting. Out of that sectional meet Helen. Victor and Opal Stockard, amount from 310 to a maximum of ing, which was attended by approxi Donald DeMoss, Ed and Jack Banta, Trees Arrive Tuesday. 3500, or sufficient to finance seed mately 700 persons, came the selec ing and harvesting, providing it is Trees ordered in a pool by farm tion of a committee to canvass the Lawrence Hunt and Tillford Stil- lings. adequately secured by a crop mort ers of this district arrived Tuesday question of organizing a national gage, can be obtained. Vic Epperson wat a Pendleton from the state college extension ser milk producers’ federation. The com The application for a loan must vice in excellent condition. Assist- mittee reported favorably and in visitor Monday. indicate that he is cooperating In ant County Agent W. A. Sawyer an February of 1917 the Federation was Bert, Ed and Donald Parson were the crop production control program nounced. A total of 5400 trees have incorporated under the laws of Illi Pendleton visitors Sunday. this of the AAA or is not proposing to been distributed on the project Richard Houston of La Grande nois as a non-profit, non-trading or increase his 1935 production of week. ganization; but its temporary board visited at the Dixon home Saturday. basic commodities in a manner det Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Rainwater and of directors had upon it very few rimental to the success of the AAA and Francis persons who were actively identified daughters, Marguerite ----- home Ladies Auxiliary Meets. program. As the regional office for with the associations that were mar were visitors at the Lathrop Oregon has been moved from Salt Sunday evening. keting milk. At the regular session of the meet Lake to Spokane, it Is expected that Helen Couture, who has been I recall, during the first year more rapid service will be given on ing of the Women's Auxiliary to the • of As the Federation’s life eight asso spending the last week at the Wells loans this year than heretofore, says Farm Bureau April 5, a fine show ciations formally ratified affiliation. home, returned to her home near ing was made on the park clean-up. Tuetsch. it was several years after Oregon City this week. Helen is a County agents report taking ap Among the things done were fence However, graduate of the Hermiston high plications for approximately 1,000 repairing, planting trees and shrub the Federation came into existence an active body before its board school. of these loans last spring and it Is bery, tree trimming and starting the as Mr. and Mrs. L. Hammer were expected that an equal or larger construction of an outdoor fireplace. was composed exclusively of persons Pendleton business visitors Tuesday. by and representative of the Locations for flower beds and shrubs •elected . number will be taken this year. Mr. and Mrs. John Hartley and were discussed. The next meeting member organizations. One by one will be held in the Union church in the enthusiastic promoters of the grandchildren Maxine, Carleen and OREGON C0RN-H0G SIGNUP Hermiston. Friday, April 19, with idea who were on the original board John Hartley of Walla Walla, visit Mrs. H. J. Ott, as chairman, assist dropped out and their places were ed at the H. A. Hooker home Thurs THREE-FOURTHS 34 MARK ed by the ladies of the T-'lo T-Go taken by persons of more direct re day and Friday. The third community get-to-geth- Approximately 75 per cent of the club. Gardening will be the subject sponsibility. er meeting was held at the Columbia The first president of the Feder and dinner will be served at noon. the number of hogs represented in ation was a member of that organi school house Friday evening. The 1934 corn-hog contracte in Oregon zation committee. He was the late program consisted of a piano and have signed up for the 1935 pro POMONA GRANGE MEETS AT Milo D. Campbell. He served as pres violin solo by Mr. Carbon and Mr. gram, according to a report made to ident during the strenuous war per Grill. Other numbers were: Group Washington by Charles W. Smith of LEXINGTON SATURDAY. iod and the subsequent depression. singing; reading by Genevieve Blin- the Oregon State college extension He resigned to become a member of ston; whistling solo by Mrs. Joe service, head of the campaign this the Federal Reserve Board and died Udey; an accordion solo by Nat year. Morrow County Pomona Grange a week after taking oath of office. Stockard; a talk by H. M. Sommerer This is considered a good percen met in Lexington last Saturday in Mr Campbell was succeeded by on the Townsend plan; a violin and tage in view of the present favor an all day and evening session with Judge John D. Miller who served uke selection by Mr. and Mrs. Hug; able pork prices and other circum Lexington Grange as host. from February 16, 1923 to October solo by Joe Udey; duet by Lois Hut stances in this state. The campaign The morning session was taken up 18, 1928, when he retired and the chison and Leonard Bails; and a this year was carried out without with reports from subordinate Gran executive mantle was turned over to vocal solo by Childs Barham. unusual incidents, and completion of ges and reports of various standing Mr. Harry Hartke. A year ago Mr. Faith Wilson was a week end the contracts is expected to be ac and special committees. Several res Hartke retired and he was succeed guest at the Joe Hawkins ranch at complished promptly. With a few olutions were read and referred to a ed by our present president, Mr. N. Adams. after P. Hull.______ counties still to report, the final committee on resolutions, Jo Ellen Mopps and Mr. and Mrs. _______ total is estimated at 1400 contracts which lunch was served. H. A. Hooker and daughter Nel'ie. Immediately after lunch the var for this state. were visitors in Pendleton Saturday. CO-OPERATIVE GLEANINGS. ious committees met and formed Jo Ellen and Nellie attended a 4-H plans for future work. FILENE COMBINES SOCIAL meeting while there. The NRA Research and Planning club The resolutions committee intro Don Harrison, who has been em- VISION WITH SOCIAL ACTION. duced a number of resolutions, the Division reports on America's first ployed at the H. A. Hooker ranch is chief of which was a request to Con industry, automobile manufacturing, now working for Baxter Hutchison. I labor unrest, some gress to take the profit out of muni that there the rooi roof of -------- is - great sattaontotaHlo from I A fire fire started started on me oi the inr I Edward A. Filene’s name will go tions used by the war department. foremen are Walter Knapton house Tuesday morn- down into history as a rare business The lecture hour or open program but the blaze was smothered man. He was and still is one of the consisted of musical and literary Simon .nereesua work immediately and little damage done. few of his kind in America. Hé built numbers, and talks by State Deputy 40, a great business and applied social Palmiter and State Grange Overseer ty produce, men are driven at an and Jess who Sneed: . . a week attitudes towards his employees as Morton Thompkins. Mr. Mrs- Barber, left about did Robert Owen. But unlike Rob Mr. Palmiter spoke on co-operation Inhuman pace by the spectre of fear, ago for the Veterans’ hospital In ert Owen he did not then discontinue and outlined the work done by var trernena Ä men? waÏÂ' n"; ; rotund i tiand, returned Monday. active business and follow wlll-o’- ious Granges in stalling co-op oil and J M. Richards of Stanfield was a the wisps in forming paternalistic gas stations, of which a large num ■■ the L. Hammer colonies where a few were to live ber have recently been opened. up hw ------- -—. -- , , Thursday. together as brothers and let the rest 19 = do the home Morton Thompkins gave an inter example, in some instances - Ann Sommerer attended the 4-H of the world go by. Edward A. Fi- esting explanation of the work of work of 250, and 30c does the work club meeting In Pendleton Saturday lene saw the nation as a whole. He the State Grange Legislative Com of 33 by contrast with 1929. saw the need of cooperative credit mittee at the recent session of the first. He poured hundreds of thou State Legislature, and touched brief Pendleton Directory A super statement from a letter sands of dollars of his wealth into ly on the state melon and tomato from J. H. Lindenberger of Louis- teaching and organizing credit code. unions which are cooperative baby The Grange recessed at 5.30 for ville, Kentucky: "I believe that un HUDSON * TERRAPLANE banks. Then he set the organization dinner and convened again at 7:00 less this consumers’ movement ex SALES and SERVICE on its own feet and cut It off from o’clock, and conferred the beautiful pands very rapidly and effectively “We never close.” philanthropic support and started it and impressive degree of Pomona on we are in serious danger of being off to help absorb the financial a class of six. overwhelmed by fascism. It is only PETERSON BROTHERS structure of America for and by the through the vigorous development of 119 West Court St. Phone 177 people. the spirit of cooperation that we can Now he still sees visions and To Use Own Codling Moth Bands. dreams dreams. Having gotten co LA GRANDE—So impressed is H. hope for future happiness in the operative credit unions under way H. Weatherspoon of Union county world. In faet, I believe it is true he announces plans for a chain of with the effectiveness of bends for cooperative department stores. It’s codling moth control thet he plans that the extent to which the peoples an inspiration to meet such a great to band every tree In his orchard of any age are able to cooperate man who has and still is helping to this year, says E. L. Woods, emer within groups and to cooperate in lead America out of the wilderness gency agricultural assistant. Mr inter-group relationships Is a just — 222 E. ALTA — and who apparently never proposes Weatherspoon will also make his to rest until America is a Coopera own bands this year by chemically measure of the civilization of an age.” tive Economic Democracy. treating corrugated paper. indistinguishaase Legee. -employment workers, is are, aneir-ing, skpleväea"rto"oEyoha ”Kumhan“en"ner Tne gousels soxezccupied by Mr. to Wheeler Studio A Classified Directory of WHO I WHO in PENDLETON HYATT and BRAWN —Quality Men’a Wear— Reliable Business and Pro fessional People This News paper Recommends to You— Auto Clearing House Auto Parta Glass Replaced “We Keep Upkeep Down” FLORSHEIM SHOES 718 Main Street 626 Cottonwood St. - Phone 38 DR. DALE ROTHWELL CORRECT GLASSES At Reasonable Prices Optometrist & Optician Over Woolworths Phone 535J LIFE IS STILL WORTH LIVING! —It is still possible to put on a fresh suit of clothes—tailored for you by HOENCK TAILOR SHOP BREIER 1935 Pendleton Music House PIANOS RADIOS MAY-TAG WASHER KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR Oregon Pendleton DR. H. A. NEWTON DENTIST Realistic Beauty Shop Hemstitching - Baby Articles Children's Wearing Apparel 740 Main St. Phone 601 FRED H. BROWN 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” Buster Brown Shoe Store Pendleton 725 Main Street Palmer-Chiropractor Neurocalometer Service Cuboid Arch Supports 104 First Nat'l. Bk. Bldg. Telephone 730J AUGUST NOREEN Alterations - Cleaning & Pressing —Suits Made to Order— Phone 688-J 6451 Main St. BANISH PILES FOREVER Guaranteed or Your Money Back Latest Scientific Proven Method Dr. R. B. Brundage Bond Bldg.-Room 14 Phone 148 Do you know we carry a full line of Sherwin-William’s PAINTS and VARNISHES? Reardin’s Washable Kalsomine. GADWA’S s Thews & Ryder Tin Shop SERVICE CLEANERS Repair and Upholstering Mattress Renovating Work Done at Portland Prices Estimates Given Free 310 West Webb Phone 818J OREGON CAFE PENDLETON PHONE 526 — Phone 424 — Balcony Glenn's Pharmacy A-l Furniture Hospital 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 SERVICE SALES Warm Air Heating & Ventilating Sheet Metal Works All Classes of Sheet Metal Work 129 West Alta Phone 705 MAMIE SAMPSON DR. A. G. BAUMEISTER THE H & H SHOP MINNIE M. HENDERSON, Prop. A Good Place to Buy Used Cars and Trucks. DENNIS MOTOR CO. FEEBLER Bldg. PHONE 12 BEST SERVICE AND BODY DEPT. IN EASTERN OREGON TAILOR YOUR ONLY A STRANGER ONCE AT - Kent’s Cafe * JEWELER — 817 MAIN STREET BOONE BEAUTY SHOPPE All Branches Beauty Work Per. Waves $3.50 and $5.00 743 Main St. Phone 1050 JAMES R. FERGUSON "Smiling Associated Service' East Court & Mill Phone 197J Stephen’s Luncheonette O. O. STEPHENS, Manager 737 MAIN ST. - PHONE 357 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— Whon in Town Ask for Rainier! 'Tn ths Wsst It’s Rainier” BILL DAVIS, Distributor 722 Cottonwood St - Pendleton Dependable Used Cara - Trucks OLSEN - KING, INC. WATCH REPAIRING : JEWELER 627 Main Street BONDED INSURED Portland • Pendleton Motor Freight, Inc. Personal Service Hermiston Pendleton Phone 852 Phone 369 PAY LESS FOR DRUGS Complete Line of Veterinary Remedies —For Information— SHOP & SAVE Dodge - Plymouth - Packard 24-Hour Service on Everything for Your Car—Tel. 963. GLENN’S PHARMACY W. F. MAHRT The Cinderella Shop Holdman Auto Service LADIES READY-TO-WEAR SHOES - and BEAUTY SHOP COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE —807 Main Street— Cottonwood and Alta Pendleton, Oregon. Delco Light Plants, Pumps, Radio and Appliances 719 Garden Street - Pendleton SIMPSON’S APPAREL FOR WOMEN 724 MAIN STREET Will M. Peterson Raley Peterson Charles A. Peterson attorney - at - law Pendleton, Oregon American Tire Shop CLYDE M. PERKINS, Prop. Lawn Mower Sharpening. Bicycle Repairing and Phonograph Work: Guaranteed Vulcanizing. 721 Garden Street. There la no substitute for "PURITY QUALITY” PURITY BAKERY Phone 131 «32 Main Wm. Roesch Brewing Co. "OLD MASTER BEER" Established 1882 Pendleton Murphey Paint Co. Inc. Phone 318 121 E. Court St. Wall Paper - Paints - Oils Varnishes - Picture Frames - Contracts and Job Work • Pendleton Iron Works SUNL1TE BAKERY, Inc. P. O. Box 81 Telephone 80 Pendleton. Oregon General Repair * Foundry Work Electric and Acetylene Welding Hydrogen Irrigation Pumpa East Alta Street "Home Owned and Operated.” BUTTERNUT BREAD SOCIETY CAKES 320 East Court Phone 122 Dooley’s 5c to $1.00 Store TROY TWacef LAUNDRY 813 Main Street Novelties - Notions Dry" Goods - Hardware and Pendleton Baking Co. BREADS AND PASTRIES HERB GREEN, Jeweler EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING 707 Main Street DRY CLEANERS WE CALL— MON. — WED. — FRI. BLUE MOUNTAIN PRODUCE CO. INC. • 18 Garden Street Phone 243 Cash Buyers of Poultry, Eggs, Cream. Veal, and Hogs. Hawkinson Tread Service 605 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