Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1935)
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1938. FARM CO OPERATIVE DIVISION . A MESSAGE TO CO-OPERATIVES FLOURISHING EVERY MEMBER. Canning Schedule DURING DEPRESSION. AUGUST 12 to 18. The farm cooperative movement continues to go forward, as recent statistics from Pennsylvania demon strate. In that state, farmers who buy and sell through co-ops did a total business of almost 835,000,000 in 19 3 4, as compared with $27,000,- 000 in 1933. Both volume and sales were substantially larger. Milk marketing associations hand- led 5 per cent more milk, and the value was 40 per cent higher- Egg marketing groups sold 50 per cent more eggs. and livestock associations Increased their volume by «0 per cent. Finally, the total membership of Pensylvania farmers in cooperative associations in 1934 amounted to 67,953—an advance of 1« per cent over the previous year. Similar records have been made In other states, on greater or small scales. Each year shows advances in the size of cooperative groups— well as improvement in the work done by the associations on behalf of their members. Cooperation is one thing that has actually flourished during depression. 1:00 to 3:30 P. M. No. 21 can Corn No. 2 can Corn No. 21 can Beans No. 21 can Corn No. 2 can Corn No Canning making special arrangement. Products not listed will be canned by 8:00 to 11:00 A. M. MONDAY—No. 21 can Tomatoes TUESDAY—No. 2 can Tomatoes WEDNESDAY—No. 2 12 cn. Tomatoes THURSDAY—2 12 - Chicken or Beet FRIDAY—Left Open SATURDAY—No. 2 % can Tomatoes LOCAL FEDERAL CREDIT UNION TO HOLD ELECTION FRIDAY. Election of officers of the Hermis ton, Oregon, Federal Credit Union, will be held Friday evening, August 9, at the library at 8:00 P. M. The by-laws of the organization will be read, followed by a general discussion of credit union work, and what credit unions are for. A credit union is really a coopera tive savings and loan association, with the emphasis on the ’’loan”. Anyone residing in Morrow or Umatilla county is eligible to mem bership, and all persons interested are invited to attend and take part in the meeting. DARLING, WILARDSON AND Stanfield Grange Dance Aug. 10. COSBY TO SPEAK. I WANT AOS LEAVE ORDERS FOR SIZE NO. 2 % cans peaches, apricots, pears, 15c can. W. C. Isom, Meadow Camp service station. 2 mi. east of Irrigon, Oregon.52-4 tc CANNING PEACHES—2 *€ PER pound at the orchard. Bring your own containers. W. T. Bray, Uma tilla, Oregon. 50-2tp PEACHE RIPENING AT ED- mond's orchard, August 8 to Sep- tember. Price 81.25 per apple box. 50-ltc WANT TO TRADE HORSE FOR used car, ’28 or '29. Small. In- 50-3tp quire at Herald office. FOR SALE—OAK BUFFET. PAIN- ted green, in good condition. Priced reasonably. Inquire at Ams- berry’s. 50-ltC MEETING. ses A meeting of the Umatilla Project Farm Bureau is called for Friday evening. August 16, at 8:00,P. M., at the Hermiston Union chupch. The purpose of this meeting is | mainly for entertainment. The Home Economics club, with Mrs. W. A. Hineline as superintendent, will have a prominent part on the pro gram. Some good music and other features will be added. Visitors are always welcome. Come, and leave your troubles at home. C. M. JACKSON, Secretary. NOTICE TO DELINQUENT FARM BUREAU MEMBERS. Ates" . . St costs SL’Noo no Mo*’ ) 1 The accounts of the Umatilla Pro- | ject Farm Bureau show a few mem bers still in arrears for their 1935 dues of 81.00. We would like very I much to have this all cleaned up as soon as possible. The Farm Bureau needs this money for various com munity benefits. Dues are payable at the Farm Bureau Co-op. If you j happen to be in arrears, please call and get in good standing as soon as convenient. C. M. JACKSON, Secretary. after ft leave Yakima and than it the bank are restricted to a margin will come to Hermiston. More in- of 3 per cent, establishing a present la Japan. the Cold Storage Locker plant and to its normal practice of closing new instructed the management to see loans in cash, as a result of the rea- that all meat going into the lockers dy demand for federal firm mort is properly tagged with the bona- | gage corporation bonds in the in fide producer's shipping tag sup- vestmeat markets, according to a plied by the Sheriff of each county, statement by President E. M. Ebr- Heretofore it has been the belief hardt. that this tagging is necessary only For the last year and a half the when the animal is shipped but the law applies to all meat transported land bank has been exchanging its from one place to another. In this own consolidated bonds for federal case, the meat is moved from the farm mortgage corporation bonds farm to the locker plant. BE SURE which are guaranteed both as to YOUR MEAT IS TAGGED. Any principal and interest by the federal meat left in the chill room without government, and closing its loans tags is illegal and the creamery will with mortgage corporation bonds and partly with cash. be liable to pay a penalty. Tags may be secured at the cream “One of the principal reasons tor ery. using bonds in lieu of cash in mak ing Land bank and Land bank com LAND BANK LOANS missioner's loans,” Mr. Ehrhardt ex- plains, “was to get a far-flung dis- NOW PAID IN CASH. »“•button of them in rural districts. This has been well accomplished, the bonds being well received by the On Monday of this week the Fed public in general and the farmers' eral Land bank of Spokane returned creditors in particular." NOTICE OF FARM BUREAU The Stanfield Grange will hold an old time dance at the Grange hall Turkey growers throughout Uma Saturday, August 10. Everybody is tilla and nearby counties in Oregon welcome. and Washington are making plans to participate in the annual tour MINISTERS HOLD STATE WIDE and picnic of the Eastern Oregon Turkey Growers association. This CONFERENCE ON CONSUMERS’ event will occur in the vicinity of CO-OPERATION. Hermiston on Saturday, August 17. The tour will start at the Experi One hundred ministers represent ment Station near Hermiston at ing Catholic, Jewish and Protestant Granges To Picnic. organizations in Wisconsin gathered 9:30 A. M., and from there the all day Grange picnic will be An in Madison, June 24, for the first group will proceed to three commer held Sunday, August 11. at the Co- I cial turkey farms for observations of lumbia park. Three Granges, Echo, I state-wide Church, School and Coop eration Conference. The following most approved turkey management Stanfield and Westland, will be rep Free ice cream and cot- | day seventy ministers met in Minne methods. At noon, there will occur resented. fee will be served to those present. ! apolis for a similar conference for the picnic lunch at Columbia Park. A short program will be rendered, During the afternoon there will and ' there will be contests of var- Minnesota. At both meetings plans were laid for intensive education be a program featuring prominent ious kinds. It this picnic proves to a similar picnic will be I programs throughout these states on people identified with turkey pro be a success, annually by the Granges. held duction and marketing. The group "the cooperative way of life’’. The conferences, hailed by the "Minneso will include Mr. Ray O. Darling; ta Leader" as the beginning of Co Mr. Bert Willardson, sales agent for Auxiliary Will Meet. operative Crusade, discussed at the Northwest Turkey Growers at The Farm Bureau Auxiliary will length the possibility of applying Los Angeles; and Mr. H. E. Cosby, meet at Columbia park Friday, Aug the "principles of brotherhood” to Extension Poultryman of Oregon ust 16th, at 2:00 o’clock, according economic life by promotion of con Agricultural college. Musical num to announcement of the following bers will also be a part of the pro committee, Mrs. Mrs. Jackson Harr, sumers’ cooperation. Mrs. J. H. Reid and Mrs. G. H. gram. The Conferences were an out Hughes. The tour committee is very anx growth of a preliminary conference held in Chicago this spring which ious that this affair be made avail was inspired by the work of Miss able to the largest possible number 4-H CLUB NEWS. Helen Topping, secretary to Toyohi of interested persons, and every op The 4-H We Can Canning club ko Kagawa of Japan. Miss Topping portunity is taken to extend a gen Picnic lunches and the Kookie Kooking Klub enter- has been touring the Central West eral invitation. their mothers last Wednes- this spring telling of the work of should be brought by those attend tained day at their annual Mothers’ Day ing. Dr. Kagawa in building the cooper picnic, held at the Turnblad home ative movement in Japan. on the river. After an enjoyable Allowance on Sacks. dinner, the girls practiced their pro- At Madison, Rev. Rupert Hollo for the coming Farm Bureau way, addressing the conference, de On and after August first the gram meeting which is to be held August clared, "There is no focus for relig Farm Bureau Co-operative of Hee 16. The date for the next meeting ion in economic life outside the co- miston will allow three cents for of the club is August 16. second hand sacks. Sacks must be operative movement”. He pointed clean At the Farm Bureau meeting to be and in serviceable condition. to the growth of the cooperatives as Branded sacks will remain at ten held August 16, at eight o’clock, the 4- h clubs will give a program in an indication that people are begin cents. which they will try to demonstrate H. M. SOMMERER, Manager some ning to realize that business can be of the things which they were conducted on the basis of mutual taught at summer school. These LIVE STOCK MEN PAYING members go to Corvallis not only for aid rather than profit taking. a good time, but also t bring back Rabbi Louis T. Cashdon, Msgr. OFF DEBT. REPORT SHOWS. something to benefit their clubs and Joseph Reisterer, Helen Topping, community. How rising live stock prices have and Max Leopold conducted panel Ice cream and cake will be sold helped turn the tide for northwest discussions at the Madison Confer- by the Kookie Kooking Klub and We enee. E. R. Bowen, General Secre caftle and sheep men is indicated by Can Canning club after the meeting. proceeds from this will be used tary of the Cooperative League, told r report from the Federal Interme The to send the teams to the State Fair. the conference that the cooperative diate Credit bank of Spokane that The teams are as follows: Helen movement is not only an economic live stock paper to the extent of Jendrzejewski and Margaret Clarke, system but a way of life. Rev. 35,570,000 has been liquidated dur who will demonstrate canning in the pressure cooker: Esther McMullin Frank J. Kennedy was general ing the past four months out of and Marie Skovbo, who will demon marketing receipts. Payments from chairman of the Minneapolis meet- strate baking rolls; and Mary Rodda ing and with Miss Topping and Mr. the sale of stored wool have totalled and Nina Rae McCulley, who will Bowen addressed a public meeting more than $4,000,000 and from cat judge. Mrs. Jessie Hlneline will ac in the evening which closed the con- tle and lambs $1,730,000 and $340, company the girls on the trip. 000. respectively. ference. "It is highly cheering to see oper- COOPERATIVE FILM IS Both conferences elected commit- ators have an opportunity to reduce COMING TO HERMISTON tees to continue the work of the state organizations in drawing up their borrowing and liquidate their detailed plans for an aggressive ed- debts under more favorable condi- The cooperative organizations of I tions,” says Paul F. Matson, vice- Hermiston are fortunate in being ucational program. president of the bank. "Without able to obtain the one hour film LIBERAL JOURNAL TO FEATURE this source of credit many of them known as, "A trip to Cooperative would have been forced to liquidate Europe," for showing at the local ARTICLES ON CO-OPERATION. on a ruinously low market. Now theatre Tuesday evening, Septem they have a chance to share in the ber 3. The FORUM, one of America's improvement of prices.” The scenes will Include the great moot influential monthly journals, The intermediate credit bank does Rockdale Cooperative of England, will publish a series of articles on not lend directly to stock men or Danish producers and consumer co- Consumers' Cooperation beginning farmers, nor does it lend federal operatives, Swedish cooperative In the August issue. The series is treasury money. It discounts sound movement, and cooperative work of written by Bertram B. Fowler, for ly secured agricultural paper for merly of the editorial staff of THE live stock loan companies, coopera other European nations. In Yakima the Farm Bureau, the CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, tive production credit associations, and contributor to many prominent rural banks, etc., obtaining its loan Grange Co-operatives, and the City Consumer’s Cooperative are putting magazines. The first article. “Af funds by marketing debentures to ter the NRA What?” will challenge the Investing public. Credit bank on the film the first week it arrives America to follow the leadership of debentures are in such favorable de in the northwest. They plan to make England and the Scandinavian coun mand that a record low discount it a cooperative rally with a speak er or two before showing the film. tries in developing a strong consum- rate of 2 per cent has been in effect The Farm Bureau Unite of Walla ers’ cooperative movement as a for more than a year. Lending in- method of recovery. The article in stitutions which discount through Walla county will show the film eratives PAGE THREE "/ : ■ J * Naturally, you want neither the tmoytact nor the danger of tire troubles when you tour. You can be safe on your next trip —and for many, many trips to come—if you drive on depend able, long-wearing, road-gripping U. S. Royals. The Tempered Rubber in U. S. Royals is the toughest, longest-wearing ever discovered. The Cog-wbeel Treed is safest against skidding. And the double, Inverted Safely Breaker, in combination with Safety- Beaded Cordt gives you a tire body 84% safer against high- speed blowouts. Drive in today for our free tire inspection! 6 V . y 12 42 On Sale TODAY at these LOW PRICES! U. S ROYALS 4.50 x 20 $5.49 4.75 x 19 $842 5.00 x 19 $0.02 5.25x18 $10-04 ; FARM BUREAU CO-OPERATIVE OF HERMISTON CO-OPERATIVE SERVICE STATION United Rubber States WHO Is WHO in PENDLETON HYATT and BRAWN —Quality Men's Wear— FLORSHEIM SHOES 718 Main Street PENNEY'S I r P L F N fY COMPANY, Incorporates Pendleton, Oregon. SHOP & SAVE BANISH PILES FOREVER Guaranteed or Your Money Back Latest Scientific Proven Method Dr. R. B. Brundage Bond Bldg.-Room 14 Phone 148 A Classified Directory of Reliable Business and Pro fessional People This News paper Recommends to You— LOCALLY OWNED NATIONALLY KNOWN "Shoes for the Entire Family" Buster Brown Shoe Store 725 Main Street Pendleton OREGON CAFE 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 805 «3 2 Main Street Hawkinson Tread Service 505 East Court St Phone 170 Crrt' J. Kruger. Manager NEW MILES FOR OLD) BEST SERVICE AND BODY DEPT. IN EASTERN OREGON A Good Place to Buy Used Cara and Trucks. SALES SERVICE DENNIS MOTOR CO. PHONE 52« PENDLETON THE H & H SHOP Pendleton Iron Works MINNIE M. HENDERSON. Prop. Hemstitching - Baby Articles Children’s Wearing Apparel 740 Main St. - - Phone «01 General Repair & Foundry Work Electric and Acetylene Welding Hydrogen Irrigation Pumps East Alta Street SERVICE CLEANERS BREIER 1935 Company L. E. Thorne, Proprietor • Cleaning - Pressing - Alterations Have Your Cleaning Done BONDED - - INSURED Portland - Pendleton Motor Freight, Inc. "The KAR-TET Way" 519 Main St. -We Deliver- Tel. 76 Personal Service Pendleton Hermiston Phone 369 Phone 862 TROY Twasor LAUNDRY JAMES R. FERGUSON DRY CLEANERS “Smiling Associated Service East Court a Mill