Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1935)
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1935 THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. lines. Finish Is a Ford-developed baked enamel. There are five body colors, Washington, blue, gray Vine- yard green, Cordoba tan, gunmetal and black, of which the first two are new. Steering gear ratio has been in- creased to 17-to-l from 15-to-l, and the front axle steering arm length ened. It is estimated effort required in steering has been reduced more than 25 per cent, as a result of these improvements. Gear shifting is made easier by re ducing the length of travel of the gear shift lever. The number of anti friction bearings in the chassis is increased to 27 from 25. The new steel wheel consists of a drawn steel spoke section electrical ly welded to the rim, forming a single steel unit of exceptional strength. The wheel is completed by a 121-inch hub cap with polished rustless steel center carrying the V-8 insignia. Longer Lines in Ford V-8 for 1936 el THE LONGER and more graceful lines of the Ford V-8 for 1936 are well illustrated in this view of the popular De Luxe Tudor Sedan. The new longer hood extends gracefully over the attractive new radiator grille. Wide streamlined front fenders, with an imposing flare, shroud the tires and house the 1938 FORD V-8 CARS ON DISPLAY HERE SOON Ford V-8 cars for 1938 will be on display for the first time at the Rohrman Motor Co. garage next Body lines which strike a new note in conservative streamlining, a new treatment of the interiors and three Important refinements in chas sis engineering summarize the prin cipal improvements. There are no radical changes. The 85-horse power horns behind chromium grilles. New design steel wheels with 121-inch hub caps are handsome and easy to clean. Bucket-type front seats are exception ally comfortable. This body type, of welded steel like all Ford V-8 bodies, is also available without de luxe appointments at lower cost. V-8 engine, of which more than 2,- 000,000 are now in operation, is un altered. Of three principal chassis improve ments, one—improved steering, is aimed at greater ease and safety of operation. Two others tend to great er comfort. One is the use of new steel wheels which lessen the un sprung weight and thus provide greater riding comfort. The other is an improved transmission using quiet helical gears—formerly used only in second and high speed, in all tor- t UMATILLA NEWS By Louise Byrnes ward speeds and reverse. A new front-end treatment gives added distinction to the body lines. The hood is longer, extending grace fully over the attractive new radia tor grille. With its vertical slots and more accentuated "Vee,” as well as its smoothly rounded lower edge which blends with the streamlined curve of the inner portion of the fenders, the grille contributes a new note of smartness. The welded steel body is low and wide, with flowing rear quarter T e Sowing and Reaping THE NEW FORD V-8 FOR 1936 What is new about it? Of course, the newest engine in the low-price car field is still the V- 8 engine. Since Ford made it available to all car users (keeping it as economical as cars with fewer cylinders) the Ford V-8 has been the newest engine on the market, and remains the newest for 1936. You may buy a car on minor “talking points"—some specially advertised fea ture "with the car thrown in"—but after all, it is the engine you buy when you buy a car. Hence we put the engine first. Other new pointa about the car make a long liat. Its lines are much more beautiful. The hood is longer and sweeps forward over the distinctive new radiator grille, giving the car a length and grace that are instantly impressive. The fenders are larger, with a wide flare. Harns ara con- cealed behind circular grilles beneath the headlamps. New steel wheels. Ford upholstery — always of sterling quality and excellent taste—is rich and enduring. The appointments of the car have a new touch of refinement. There is no question about the increased beauty of the Ford V-8 for 1936. In more practical matterà, many improvementa have been made — Steering is made easier by a new steer ing gear ratio. The cooling system cir culates 51/2 gallons of water through a new, larger radiator. Natural thermo syphon action is assisted by two cen trifugal water pumps. New style hood louvres permit a rapid air-flow around the engine. Easier, quieter shifting of Ford gears —The gear shift lever now travels a shorter distance. The two qualitiea yoa want in brahea — Brakes that stop the car with ease and certainty. Ford Super-Safety Brakes ci the long-tested, fool-proof, mechanical design, Salety — eM al w aya —in the electri cally welded genuine steel body. Safety Glass all around at no extra cost. Hun dreds have written grateful letters be cause this glass has protected the safety of their families. A car yoa can drive without atrain if you like. in city or country. Steady, holds the road, responds to the driver's touch like a well-trained horse. You don't have to "push" or "fight" the Ford V-8 —driver and car easily get on terms of good understanding With each other. An engine has much to do with the roominess of a car. Very much indeed. A long engine uses up car space. The compact V-8 engine permits much of the ordinary engine space to be used by passengers. It really is a great car in every way, this 1936 Ford V-8-the finest, safest, most dependable Ford car ever built. Now on display by Ford dealers. LOW FORD V-8 PRICES THIRTEEN BODY TYPES—Coup« (5 windows). $510. Tudor Sedan. $520. Fordor Sedan. $580. DE LUXE—Roadster (with rumble seat), $560. Coupe (3 windows), $570. Coupe (5 windows), $590. Tudor Sedan. 3565. Cab 3555. Phaeton. riolet (with rumble seat). $625. 3625. Tudor Touring Sedan Fordor Sedan. (with built-in trunk), $590. Fordor Touring Sedan (with built- in trunk). IBM Convertible Sedan. $760. r. o. B. Detroit. Standard accessory group, including bumpers and spare tire, extra. All Ford V-8 body types 1. 04). (. s a. peas Economical terms through Universal Credit Com pany. where we have sown. Self-condem nation would tempt us to think of our mistakes and failures, and to for get the efforts we have made to ad vance towards good. A false sense of self would blight "the fruit of the Spirit,” so that we droop with dis couragement, Instead of shining with confidence and courage, peace and serenity, which are the sure fruitage of trust in infinite good. If the Apos tle Paul had spent his time in con- demning himself for his misdirected efforts in persecuting the Christians, he would never have accomplished what he did. He knew that his min istry, In Christ, was far bigger and greater than any personal sense of triumph or failure; and he said (Phil. 3:13, 14), "Forgetting those things which are behind, and reach ing forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God In Christ Jesus.” There is a sure reward for right thinking and acting, but often, through a misunderstanding of the nature of God as divine Principle, the reward is not claimed. We are apt to think of law and justice as relating to penalty, forgetting that divine law is both wise and loving, relating only to good. The teachings of Christian Science reveal God as Principle, un- deviating, changeless Principle, Love; and as this idea dawns upon our thought we begin to understand the law which governs right thinking and acting. In "Miscellaneous Writings" (p. 331 ) Mary Baker Eddy makes it clear that if we are "abiding in Truth, the warmth and sunlight of prayer and praise and understanding will ripen the fruits of Spirit, and goodness will have its springtide of freedom and greatness." Freedom and greatness belong to goodness; they are the natural results of thé activity of good. When we break the bonds of sinful thinking, we must ex- pect freedom, because obedience to divine law brings freedom. We need the 'warmth and sunlight of prayer and praise and understanding.” As we watch and pray, and give thanka to divine Love for the good which we already poeaeas, and as wo en- deavor.each day, to gain more un derstanding of God, the source of all good, we shall understand the divine law of sowing and reaping—and ex- pect it to operate In our experience HEN a garden lover plants his garden, he confidently ex pects a reward of beauty from the seeds which he sows. Where he plants larkspur, he does not look for thistles, but expects to see, in due time, tall spires of shining blue. As he carefully cultivates the seedlings, enriching the soil and keeping it free from weeds, he is expecting to reap a bountiful reward. But how differently we are apt to regard our sowing and reaping in the mental realm! Both the law and the gospel proclaim that whatsoever a man sow- eth that shall he also reap; but the world, generally speaking, interprets this law as applying to wrongdoing, forgetting that it also applies to the sure and certain reward for right do ing. We read in the book of Job (4:8), “They that plow Iniquity, and sow wickedness, reap the same;” and we also read In Proverbs (11:18), “To him that soweth righteousness shall be a sure reward." Why does man kind in general believe in the justice which exacts penalty for wrongdoing, and fall to understand the justice which rewards righteousness? Fear of the penalty attached to wrongdo ing does not make a man good; but the joyous recognition of God as in finite good, and the glad acceptance of the fact that obedience to God brings a sure reward, help one to obey God, not because of the reward, but because such obedience brings one nearer to God, the source of all good, and results in an improved sense of health, happiness, and har mony. The Apostle Paul tells us that “the fruit of the Spirit Is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance;” and he adds, "Against such there Is no law” (Gal. 5:22, 23). We may some, times seem to toll laboriously to cul tivate "the fruit of the Spirit," but we need to remember that nothing can hinder its growth, and that noth ing can withstand Its power, for It destroys hate and envy, intolerance, burry, haste, and waste. Sometimes a wrong mental atti tude of self-depreciation or self-con demnation would hinder us from claiming the divine law of reaping . . —The Chrietiw Science HonUhr. W Why do we scry The New Ford V-8 for 1936? t In the third place, the grim reap er is cutting great swatches in the ranks of the World War veterans themselves. This condition is in creasing each year and the increase is very rapid. The average age of the American World War veteran to day is about 44 years. In the fourth place, the American Legion represents an unquestioned 100 per cent Americanism, and in these trying times when all sorts of —isms are being fostered, and any one of which strikes deeply at the very foundation of our country, re sult is—Mr. World Wa veteran— your country needs the American Legion and the American Legion needs you. and you need the Amer ican Legion. Father Domonic O’Connor, 52, died Thursday in Bend. Father O'Con nor served as Catholic priest in Uma tilla and Hermiston. Mrs. Florence Tippie is visiting in Seattle. Mrs. M. M. McCullough and child ren Rosemary and Vernon spent the week end visiting Mrs. McCullough's sister, Mrs. Elmer Newman in Mil ton. Mr. and Mrs. Don Harryman and son Gordon Lee and Mrs. James Byrnes spent Saturday in Walla Walla on business. The Pocahontas lodge has post- poned the entertainment for the How about it now? teachers until a later date. Mr. and Mrs. Art Bousquet left AAA WHEAT CONTRACTS ARE Friday for Condon. Mrs. Harry Rhodenbough and Mrs. SIMPLIFIED; SIGNUP NEAR. Fred Knudson spent Friday in Pen Oregon farmers planning to sign dleton. | the new four-year wheat contract Mrs. Dave Lane of Pasco visited in will find the procedure much sim Big College Church Restored. Umatilla Friday. plified as compared with that neces Mrs. Norman Allan and daughter CORVALLIS—Restoration of the sary with the first control program, big First Methodist church located of Page, Wn., is visiting her moth according to state college extension directly beside the campus of Oregon er, Mrs. Mable Fromdahl. service officials who have examined Virgil Woodward and Mrs. Flor State college, has been completed applications for contracts. and the rededication will take place ence Tippie motored to Walla Walla With the completion of a series of Sunday, October 20. This church to hear Mrs. Aimee Semple McPher district meetings for county agents was partially destroyed by fire last son. Arthur Roberts and sons, Clifford and allotment committeemen the April just before the state capito! third week In October, county and fire. As with other Corvallis church and Winston, returned home Thurs community meetings will be held at es, this one carries on a comprehen day from Dundee where they have once where growers will be given sive student program through its been for a month packing prunes. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Roberts and detailed information about the new Wesley Foundation, in which Mrs. daughter of Walla Walla spent the contracts and an opportunity to sign Gustave Kuhlman has been appoint week end visiting Mr. and Mrs. John the applications. ed a new acting director of student Information required on the new work. Other new religious workers Wurster. contracts is practically the same as D. W. Jackson, who is employed this year among the students are that furnished under the original Mrs. John McCormack, in charge of in Portland, is visiting his family. plan, as the base years for produc V. D. Bramer spent Monday in Westminster foundation for the tion and acreage remain the same. Presbyterian church, and Mrs. Lor- Portland on business. Lola Berry spent the week end in Farmers who did not sign up under na Jessup, assistant dean of women the old plan are not barred from devoting part-time to the Y.W. and Irrigon visiting her aunt, Mrs. Mar signing the new four-year control shall Markham. Y.M.C.A. program. M. M. McCullough and son Lloyd, contracts. In some instances where who have spent the last two months the grower was unable to establish HERALD WANT AD6 PAY in Amity where they operated a ser a practical base under the original vice station and garage, returned to rules, he may find it possible to comply under the new program. Umatilla Sunday. Such new contract signers are Violet Dexter spent the week end urged to attend the local meetings in Irrigon visiting. Valias Dexter and a friend from and it possible to confer personally La Grande spent Sunday visiting the with county or community commit home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. teemen. Although the new contract ex Bert Dexter. tends for four years, any producer who complies may terminate his A MESSAGE TO WORLD WAR contract at the end of the 1937 crop VETERANS BY A. GREENAWALD. year if he desires. On the other hand, in case conditions would make Food for thought for the World such a move necessary, the secretary ■ War veteran by A. A. Greenawald, of agriculture may terminate the membership chairman of Let 'Er contracts, but in such case growers Buck Post, Pendleton, Ore. are assured that they will be com Why am I more interested in the pensated fully for all compliance American Legion than I was when that has been made. it was first organized? A flexible adjustment payment In the first place, when the ar plan has been included in the new mistice was first signed, the public contracts by which the second in was very sympathetic to veterans’ stallment each year varies accord needs. But they and their ardor ing to the market price of wheat have since cooled off and their sym- during that crop year. This plan is pathys for the veteran have waned. intended to make certain that co- In the second place, the boys and operating wheat farmers will re girls of 1918 and 1919 are the men ceive enough from the market value and women of today, and the great and the benefit payments to give war is something that is only his them pre-war purchasing power on tory to them and consequently, they their allotments. The first 1936 ad are not greatly interested in that justment payments will be payable war or the horrible results to those next summer after compliance with that are still suffering from their in the contract for that crop year has juries sustained in field of action. been checked. I F gir PAGE THREE