____
THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1935.
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
PAGE FOUR
$4000000900999 over Sunday visitors in Boardman, lows:
returning to Yakima where they
Engineering draftsmen, various
t
IRRIGON NEWS
t have employment until late fall.
grades, *1,440 to *2,300 a year. The
By Mrs. W. C. Isom
following-named optional branches
are provided for all grades except
VETERANS STATE AID
(Too late for last week)
the junior: Architectural, civil, elec
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Caldwell who COMMISSION LISTS PROPERTY.
trical. mechanical and structural.
have been visiting Mr. Caldwell’s
Principal horticulturist (bulb and
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Com Caldwell,
A booklet of 54 pages in which is floricultura! investigations), *5,<00
left Thursday for their home in Cal listed the more than 410 farm pro a year, Bureau of Plant Industry,
ifornia. Mrs. Smith accompanied perties held by the World War Vet Department of Agriculture.
them on their trip.
erans State Aid Commission in Ore
All states except South Dakota,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brace and gon outside of Multnomah county, Iowa, Vermont, Virginia and Mary
daughter, Florene were Portland is oft the press and is available to land, and the District of Columbia,
all interested parties, according to have received less than their quota
visitors last week.
Mr. Swearington took a truck Jerrold Owen, secretary to the Com of appointments in the apportioned
departmental service at Washington,
load of potatoes to Wallula , Thurs mission.
Detailed information is given D. C.
day. Mrs. Reiker accompanied him
about
the
individual
state-owned
Full information may be obtained
on the trip and remained to visit
farms and no doubt there are a num from the secretary of the United
relatives a few days.
R. V. Jones made a business trip ber of the readers of the Hermiston States Civil Service Board of Exami
Herald who are interested in the. ners at the post office or custom
to Portland Monday.
Jess Oliver and daughter Eathel purchase of farms and homes. The house in any city which has a post
spent several days in the mountains brochures are free for the asking office of the first or the second
and can be obtained by contacting class, or from the United States Civ
last week picking huckle berries.
The board of trustees of the J. F. Hodges of Pendleton who Is the il Service Commission, Washington,
Boardman, Umatilla, and Irrigon Umatilla county representative of D. C.
Presbyterian churches met Thursday the Commission, or by writing di
evening at the Irrigon high school rect to the Salem office.
WALLACE TO KEEP WATCH ON
Compilers of the pamphlet have
building for a business conference.
The budget for the coming year endeavored to condense the data as N. W. WHEAT SURPLUS.
much as possible. Sale prices range
was made up during the session.
Mrs. Edith Markham was a Her from $125 for a Baker county hold
Assistance of the Agricultural Ad
ing to |10,000 for a farm in Harney justment administration in estab
miston visitor Wednesday.
county,
but
the
average,
according
Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Baker from
Salem, Oregon, Mrs. Doro Tittle and to Sergeant Earl R. Goodwin, assis lishing or reestablishing 'facilities
two daughters, Verna Lila and tant secretary of the commission, is for disposing of the Pacific north-
Blade Fallis from Monmouth visit approximately $2515.
west wheat surplus will depend
The commission also has listings upon the size of the wheat crop na
ed Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Warner and
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Boulware, Sun of city located holdings which are
day and Monday. They were en available to the public and every ef tionally and the regional distribu
route home from a trip to the mid fort is being made to return the tion of such surplus as may occur.
state-owned property to the tax rolls
dle western states.
This was the answer in part from
Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Rand and two by placing it in the hands of re Secretary Wallace to a special inter-
sons, David and Herbert were Hep sponsible parties. In making inqui
ry please designate the county or ci statqy committee headed by Wm. A.
pner visitors Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ora Hathaway from ty desired and also please mention Schoenfeld of O.S.C. which called
Hood River, Ore. visited their aunt Hermiston Herald. Attractive terms upon him In Walla Walla asking the
and family, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Isom can be arranged.__ ________
resumption of business by the Emer
over Sunday leaving Monday to vis
gency Export corporation.
it relatives at Monument, Ore.
CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS
Secretary Wallace told the com
A large crowd attended the wein-
•r roast at the Don Rutledge beach ANNOUNCED BY COMMISSION.
mittee that he understands the pe
which was sponsored by the Grange,
culiar situation confronting the
The United States Civil Service
Sunday evening. A very pleasant
commission has announced open growers of the inland empire, and
evening was spent.
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Allen were competitive examinations as fol said that If conditions become such |
that price levels are threatened In 1
this region he will not be unsympa-
thetlc toward taking such steps in
surplus removal as may be necessa
ry. Such operations are specially
authorized by the AAA act.
Meanwhile
announcement
has
been received from Washington that
the AAA will seek a goal of some
53,000,000 acres of wheat under
contract for the new four-year pro
gram just being launched.
40 YEARS OF SERVICE
» s »
FILM OF SAN DIEGO FAIR
RECEIVED BY FORD DEALER
Earl Stratton (right), who has boon In iho employ of iho Standard
Oil Company of California for 40 years. Is shown receiving his
40 year service pin at the hands of L. L. Campbell, District
Manager tor the Company at Portland, Oregon. Eight thousand
three hundred and sixty eight mon employed by Standard OU
have boon with the company ten years and longer.
An interesting example of a new
form of public entertainment—the
sound slide film—has been received
by A. F. Rohman, local Ford dealer.
It is titled "A Trip Through the San
Diego Fair” and shows the beautiful
setting of the California Pacific In
ternational Exposition in Balboa
Park this summer, the elaborately
mounted educational exhibits and the
recreational features,
This film is the most recent issu
ed by the Ford Motor Company.
Others include “Looking Forward
Through the Past,” which presents
a trip through Henry Ford’s Green
field Village, and "A Trip Through
the Rouge Plant,’’ largest industrial
plant In the world, operated by the
Ford Motor Company at Dearborn,
Michigan.
The local Ford dealer is making
the San Diego Fair film available to
clubs and other organizations, and
it is of special interest just now
since the Fair is the vacation desti-
nation for thousands of tourists.
The film opens with pictures of
the early California missions, which
provide the architectural theme of
the exposition, and takes the spec
tator through the street and build
ings, in a 15-minute journey, includ
ing a visual trip through the huge
Ford Building on the Fair grounds.
The exposition, as the spokesman
of the film describes it, is “an ad
venture in happiness—with an Old
World touch that brings the charm
of Europe and the Orient to Ameri
ca. It most happily joins the old
with the new in a striking summary
of four centuries of progress since
Spanish conquerors first touched the
California coast." It closes Novem
ber 11.
at The Hermiston Herald.
Romance and History Blena in Famed Greenfield Fillage
Ford Exposition Visitors See"
Miniature Reproduction
of Old Structures
**
History and romance blend with
old buildings and a colonial set
ting at Greenfield Village, Michi-
gan. The historical buildings,
which have been moved or recon-
structed as exact duplicates of the
originals, circle a “green” as they
did in all colonial communities. A
model of this interesting group of
old buildings forms a part of the
Ford Exposition at Balboa Park,
San Diego.
Around the green are scattered
the public buildings, the church,
the school, the inn, the store, the
courthouse and the town hall. Each
structure has an historic back
ground which is woven into the Henry Ford’s Greenfield Village, at Dearborn, Michigan. A miniature
events which made history in duplication is included in the model of Greenfield Village in the Ford
colonial days and into the lives of Exposition building, Balboa Park, San Diego. The church is typical of
colonial places of worship and is named after the mothers of Mr. and
the country’s leading citizens.
One of the oldest buildings in Mrs. Henry Ford. The photo at the upper left is of the Waterford,
Greenfield Village is Clinton Inn, Michigan, store and Clinton, Michigan, Inn as they appear today in
which was built in 1831-32. It was Greenfield Village where they have been removed from their original
a typical hostelry of 100 years ago locations. Clinton Inn is about 1OO years old and served as an over-
and stood in Clinton, Mich., where night stop on the stagecoach run between Detroit and Chicago. Minia
it was an overnight stop on the tures are included in the model at the Ford Exposition. The photograph
stagecoach run between Detroit and at the top right is that of the Lincoln courthouse where Abraham Lincoln
Chicago up to the early fifties. One practiced law for eight years in Login county, Illinois. The structure
of the last dances held on the is made of black walnut and the original was moved to Greenfield Village.
spring ballroom floor was on New
Year’s in 1876. The Inn has been
The town hall is located on the story frame structure of black
furnished in the style of the early
days.
east end of the common, directly walnut. One of the articles of fur
In the steeple of the Chapel of opposite the chapel. , It is an im niture in it is the original corner
Martha-Mary is a bell which was pressive white building which now cupboard fashioned by young “Abe”
cast by a son of Paul Revere. The serves as the town hall, although Lincoln and his father to pay for
church overlooks the green and is during the past year it has been a book borrowed from a neighbor
open to worshipers of all creeds used as a school. The interior in and spoiled.
and serves the residents of the vil cludes a rostrum stage at the west
Greenfield Village at Dearborn,
lage and pupils of the school as a end and an old-style stove in front Michigan, occupies 200 acres and
retreat and religious center. The with stovepipes crossing the stage. includes many buildings in which
chapel was ramed for the mothers
Abraham Lincoln practiced law the handicraft arts of the past are
of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ford. The for eight years in the Lincoln presented as they were practiced in
bricks and front doors are from the Courthouse which was formerly in their original environment of pub
irlhood home of Mrs. Ford and the Logan county, Illinois, but which lic buildings and residences which,
rst sod was turned by her when now stands in Greenfield Village. in their turn, illustrate the devel
its erection was begun.
It was first built in 1840 as a two- opment of architectural types.
*5**t
Gl
4 ar
YOU DON’T
HAVE TO ’BREAK IN”
THE FORD V-
-====x=====
STANDARD 30
PENN
A QUART
100 ^PENNSYLVANIA
PURE/-
(ot ON SALE AT
STANDARD STATIONS, INC.
MORE
□ IL
MILEAGE
You can drive it 50 miles an hour the day yon buy it
THE F ord V-8 is ready for normal driving
when you buy it. There is no tedious period
of breaking-in for 500 or 1000 miles. You
can drive it up to 50 miles an hour the first
day. And after the first hundred miles you
can drive it as fast as you desire.
That means greater motoring enjoyment for
every motorist. It is especially important to
motorists wbo are thinking about a new car
for a vacation trip — to physicians, salesmen
The reason for this is as important as the
result. The Ford V-8 needs no breaking-in
because of unusual accuracy in the manufac
ture of moving parts and the smoothness of
bearing surfaces. Clearances are correct when
you buy the car. It is not necessary to depend
AND STANDARD OIL DEALERS
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA
FORD V8