The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, April 23, 1936, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
***** * * * * * * * teresting review of the year's work.
Refreshments were served with
t PINE CITY NEWS
t Mrs. F. S. Green and Mrs. McCor­ SOUND PROSPERITY
THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1936
SPECIAL!
Save 20% on your Cleaning
— BY PURCHASING A COUPON —
A $6.00 value for only $5.00
Hermiston Dry Cleaners
Location Next Door to Post Office
JUNIORS TO HONOR
SENIORS AT ANNUAL
EVENT, MAY 15TH
HARRIS APPOINTS
VARIOUS
COMMITTEES TO WORK.
Many
Alumni Expected to Attend.
(From the Bulldog)
Plans are now being made for
the annual Junior prom, given in
the spring every year in honor of
the departing seniors. The date has
been set for May 16th and commit­
tees in charge, who were appointed
this week by Bill Harris, class presi­
WILLIAM A. CASE, Manager
PHONE 71
dent, are as follows:
Decoration — Margaret Clarke,
Opal Stockard and Irene Kennings;
Invitations—Helen Dunning, Ber­
nard Jendrzejewski; Programs—Ro­
berta Mullins, Josephine Moyer and
Mary McGonlgle; Refreshments —
Floy Attebury, Dorothy Conrad and
Edith Peterson; General Arrange­
ments—Floyd Coxen and Darrel
Seeliger; Music—Rosemary Serell.
No other definite plans have
been announced except that Stan
Atkin’s Columbians will furnish the
music and that although all alum­
ni are automatically invited, only
those graduated within five years
back are entitled to issue another
invitation to an outsider. All invi­
tations issued by upper classmen
are to be in by Wednesday, April
22nd, to Helen Dunning.
VOTE FOR
Jake Marin
Republican Candidate for
By Lennä Neill
Mr. and Mrs. James Daly and
family are moving onto their farm
which they recently purchased on
Butter Creek.
Fred Rauch, Jr., of La Grande, ar­
rived at the home of his sister, Mrs.
H. E. Young, Monday evening for
an extended visit.
C. H. Bartholomew and the Mis­
ses Cecelia Brennan and Norma Gib­
bons motored to Washington Sun­
day where Mr. Bartholomew has his
sheep.
Mr. and Mrs. John Healy and
family spent Sunday visiting rela­
tives In Heppner.
Mrs. J. J. Chisholm of Walla
Walla. Wn„ and Miss Marie Conser
of Meacham, visited at the home of
Mrs. Ollie Neill Sunday evening.
The Misses Charlotte Helms and
Lillie Rauch entered the typing con­
test at Lexington Saturday.
Mrs. Ollie Neill and daughters
Neva and Lennä, Miss Marie Healy
and Earl Wattenburger motored to
Walla Walla, Saturday on business.
Mrs. W. D. Neill is quite ill at
her home. Mrs. R. D. Estle is stay­
ing there during her illness.
E. B. Wattenburger and Malcolm
O’Brien spent the week end in Mt.
Vernon where Mr. Wattenburger
has his bees.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Currin visited
at the John Harrison home Sunday.
Mrs. Walter Wigglesworth of Echo
was a dinner guest at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. John Harrison Thurs­
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rauch and
Mrs. Pauline Weinke were business
visitors in Pendleton Thursday.
************
SHERIFF
Experience Qualified
Impartial Law Enforcement
Veteran Spanish-Ameri­
can War.
Philippine Insurrection.
Six years’ experience as
criminal deputy sheriff of
Umatilla County.
Home owner and taxpay­
er.
My experience your pro­
tection. My qualifications
and ability your guarantee
of a clean, sane and effi­
cient administration, with
courteous treatment to all
and malice toward none.
t
STANFIELD NEWS
By Sophronia Rhea
Members of the Stanfield Wom­
en’s Study club held their guest day
meeting and program in the base­
last Thursday afternoon. Miss Esth­
er Fredreckson, Miss Rose Hoosier,
Mrs. Della Hoosier, Mrs. W. E. King
and Mrs. T. Claude-Baker presented
---------------------- —
musical numbers.
Characters taking part in a •4$0$994*9*** • *
short play “Fourteen” were Mrs. t COLUMBIA NEWS t
Mabel Richards, Mrs. Inez McCor­
By MARIJANE HAMMER.
mick and Miss Rose Hoosier. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Emery Cox and fam­
F. S. Green, president, gave an in­ ily of Pilot Rock have moved onto
the ranch formerly occupied by
the ranche formerly occupied by the
Mrs. O. H. Buell visited Mrs. Carl
Hammer Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Carr of Co­
lumbia district, who have been em­
ployed at the hospital, are now em­
ployed on the G. H. Martin ranch
near Stanfield.
J. H. Ryland left this week for
Boise, Idaho.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mikesell, Bar­
bara Reid and Jo Ellen Mopps were
Sunday afternoon visitors at the
Baxter Hutchison home.
Joe Hawkins of Adams visited al
the Tom Wilson ranch Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hammer and
Mrs. L. Hammer visited at the E. E.
Rainwater home in Hermiston,
Wednesday.
Mrs. Jim Arnberg spent several
days at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
The sooner you have your
Fred Wilson in Nolin, tthis week.
General Electric Refrigerator
William Allen of the Willamette
in your kitchen the sooner you
valley was a week end guest at the
will begin saving about ilO a
S. B. Allen home. He is a former
month on your jood budget.
resident of Columbia district.
Frances Cook left this week for
Milton where she has employment.
Dorothy Wall, Tillford Stillings
and Mrs. J. H. Pearson were guests
at the Pearson home in Echo one
day this week.
Mrs. Alpha Christley, who Is suf­
fering from three broken ribs, is
reported as greatly improved.
Ruth Gifford of Stanfield was an
all night guest of Marion Casady
Saturday.
Mrs. Tom Wilson, who has been
visiting relatives at coast points for
the past three weeks, is expected
home Thursday.
John Knox is employed at the
Christley ranch this week.
L. Hammer received a shipment
of day old chicks Wednesday.
The farmers in Columbia district
are now irrigating for the first
time this season.
Dinner guests at the L. Hammer
home Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. L.
Lamon and daughters Juanita and
Eldora and son Edwin of Pendleton,
NEW CONVENIENCE FEATURES
and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hammer and
family of Hermiston.
NEW CABINET STYLING
Laura Conrad was a dinner guest
at the S. B. Allen home Sunday.
NEW LOW OPERATING COST
Gloria, Viola and Rosalie Pelle­
tier are ill at home.
• Monitor Top, Flatop and Liftop General
The Columbia Stitchers sewing
club held a meeting at the Columbia
Electric models have the famous sealed-in-steel
park club house Wednesday after­
mechanism that now gives "DOUBLE THE
noon.
COLD” and USES 40% LESS CURRENT.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Strohm were
visitors at the Wm. Lindner home
Tueeday evening.
Ruth Lindner Is recovering from
a tonsil operation performed last
week. She is with her parents.
Mrs. Buell and Mrs. Hyatt left
WE SERVE THE TERRITORY OF ECHO, STANPTELD, UMATILLA
left Friday for Portland and Castle
AND HERMISTON.
Rock where they will visit for a
few days with relatives.
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
LNBAVE aN EXTRA
,906'30
•1 gin — !
0 •
$
:
t
mick pouring. Forty gueets and
members were present, and the next
meeting was announced for April
30th at the home of Mrs. J. M.
Richards.
The Coe Ranch dairy herd has
been shipped to Portland by the
owner Wayne Coe. The herd was
one of the largest in the Umatilla
Herd improvement association.
Mrs. Agnes Hill has returned
from a pleasant winter’s stay at the
home of her daughter Mrs. Wm.
Kinberell of Calexico, Calif.
H. L. Hedrick was in Albee on
business Thursday of last week.
The Townsend club will hold its
meeting at the hotel Tuesday, April
21st, at 8:00 p. m. W. E. Burke
was the main speaker for the eve­
ning.
Mrs. W. G. Sammuals of Forest
Grpve is here visiting her daughter
Mrs. Frances Dyck.
The Stanfield high shcool seniors
enjoyed “flunk day” at Bingham
Springs, Tuesday. In the evening the
party returned to Pendleton for the
theatre.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Rhea, Walter
and Ralph Isackson, Marian Sturdi­
vant and Mary Rhea were Heppner
visitors Sunday.
Miss Claudia Gabriel and Miss
Slema Kjontvidt attended the ex-
temperaneous speaking contest in
Walla Walla Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. M. Refvem and fam­
ily were in Weston Sunday visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Nye Berry.
W. A. Nasshahn has accepted the
principalship of the grade school at
Ferndale, Ore.
Mrs. G. E. Greathouse entertained
Mrs. J. F. Lane and Misses Ila Wal­
lace and Carrie Starkweather at a
one o’clock luncheon at her home
Tuesday.
Mrs. D. R. Starkweather, Mrs.
Chas. Hoggard and Mrs. F. B. Stu­
art were hostesses at a bridge lun­
cheon at the Starkweather home
Wednesday
afternoon,
honoring
Mrs. Ernest Laughary, who is here
visiting her parents. Mrs. Laughary
lives in Omak, Wn.
NEW
\
1936 MODELS |
on /
are now
display!
Hermiston Light &
Power Co.
PAGE THREE
ERA SEEN BY FORD
“Lower Prices, Higher Wages,”
His Prescription.
New York.—Advising business men
to stop worrying and to “go sanely and
resolutely ahead with wealth produc­
tion, followed by wealth-sharing
through high wages and low prices,”
Henry Ford looks forward today to a
future of “sounder prosperity than we
have ever dreamed of In the past,”
provided “we keep our heads.”
Industry can absorb all employable
among the unemployed; great develop­
ment lies ahead for the automobile; a
vast job of modernization must be ac­
complished In America replacing heavy
materials with lighter articles; Indus­
try should be “decentralized” and
school children must be “fully pre­
pared to push on eagerly along new
lines," Mr. Ford declares In a signed
article appearing in the American
Magazine.
Mr. Ford distinguishes between two
kinds of prosperity in the article. One
is expressed, he says, by "bounding
stock markets, crowded night clubs and
spectacular riches for the few.” Sound
prosperity he describes as “an ever­
widening distribution of useful goods
and services."
“If we keep our heads we may ex­
pect to see In the future a greater
measure of this sound kind of pros­
perity than we have ever dreamed of
in the past,” he declares.
“Whether America la doomed to
another cycle of boom and collapse
does not depend on the government
which can neither help nor hinder
much. It depends upon the Intelli­
gence, decency and self-control of
American business men."
Mr. Ford states he himself is abso­
lutely uninterested in political office
and scores business men for bothering
with politics and the stock market.
He believes he can be “much more use­
ful” tending to his own business.
The new law Increasing Inheritance
taxes does not worry him, nor do
“reasonable taxes" on business.
Eliminate worry, which he describes
as “one of the most wasteful things In
the world,” be "expectant of change"
and push ahead, sums up Mr. Ford’s
current philosophy.
Mr. Ford’s own prescription for pros­
perity Is "constantly turning Increas­
ing efficiency Into lower prices and
higher wages.”
“Only the minds who see that this
Is reasonable and practicable are go­
ing to stay In business.” he insists.
“Business is purely a service and not
a bonanza.”
Fifteenth Century Ship
to Cross Atlantic Ocean
Lisbon.—A small “fifteenth century
ship” correctly built In every detail
will cross the Atlantic from Lisbon to
Santa Cruz, Brazil, next May to com­
memorate the discovery of that part of
Brazil by the Portuguese sailor, Pedro
Alvares Cabral.
In 1500 he set sail from Portu­
gal. He was bound for the East In­
dies. To avoid being becalmed off the
coast of Africa, he took an extreme
westerly course which led him to the
then unknown coast of Brazil.
He landed and claimed the country
for Portugal—naming It "Terra da San­
ta Cruz."
This voyage Is to be repeated next
May In a ship built to resemble exact­
ly Cabral's own. When It sails. Its cap­
tain will be Admiral Cago Coutinho,
who tn 1922 made the first airplane
flight from Lisbon to Brazil.
A deputation of Portuguese authors
and journalists will be the passengers,
while the cargo will be samples of
Portuguese manufactures.
The little ship will be escorted by
a flotilla of destroyers.
Wm. M. Harvey
HERMISTON
• for
County School Superintendent
UMATILLA COUNTY
Non-Partisan Ballot
“Honest, Faithful Continuation
of Impartial, Economical
Public Service.”
Born, reared and educated it
Oregon. Resident and teacher o
Umatilla County for fourteen
years. Home owner and taxpay
er. Have a family—two child
ren in public school.
Thirty-six years old. Work
War veteran, with wide exper
ience in professional and pubi!
service.
Fully qualified, reliable, hones
and impartial.
HERMISTON GIRLS WILL GO TO
MOSCOW THIS WEEK.
----------
f
(From the Bulldog)
Helen Dunning and Bonnie Jean
Follett were elected by a vote of th*
high school Girls’ League recently
to be special delegates to the annual
Tri-State Girls' League conference
which will be held this spring 1*
Moscow, Idaho. The girls will be ac­
companied by Miss Esther Sibert,
girls adviser, and Maxine Paul, lea-
gue president. The delegation from
here will leave next Friday and re­
turn probably Saturday evening.
ADVICE TO WOMEN
Mrs. W. H. Seelye of
2138 Humboldt St, Bell-
ingham, Wash., said:
“Some time ago I had
no strength. I would
become tired easily, it
was an effort for me to
do anything. Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription
improved my appetite
and helped to build me
up so that I fell fine,
and housework became a pleasure instead
of a burden.” New size, tablets 50 cents.
GUIDE FOR THE
WISE BUYER •
Spanish Women Doffing
Shackles of Convention
Madrid.—The long-sheltered women
of Spain have been entering fields once
closed to them In Increasing numbers.
Twenty-five years ago women In Span­
ish universities were rare, but today
In some faculties, such as philosophy
and literature In the University of
Madrid, there are more women than
men.
Sports have begun to make a wide
appeal, particularly In Madrid, where
hundreds of girls go swimming In the
summer and skiing In the winter. Ev­
ery week-end hundreds leave Madrid
for a day on the slopes of the nearby
Guadarrama range.
The republic gave Spanish women the
vote, and In Madrid more women voters
are registered than men.
Planets “Who’s Who"
Berkeley, Calif.—One thousand and
ninety-one minor planets discovered
between the years 1801 and 1929 have
been listed In the research surveys
of the University of California students
observatory. This “Who’s Who" of the
planets gives all the available data on
as many of them as possible.
• The Maytag sold itself to fame
—to world leadership. Aftercare­
ful comparison with other makes,
more women have purchased
Maytags than any other washer
because it offers more in fast,
gentle, thorough washing service
for more years. To know why,
you must compare it point by
point with ordinary washers—
discover its many exclusive ad­
vantages. •
The one-piece, cast-aluminum
tub; the Gyratator washing ac­
tion, originated by Maytag; the
Koller Water Remover, and many
other ad vantages are found only
in the Maytag.
Easy deferred payments
Any Muy tn ft may be had equ ip/ted
uith gam dine Multi-Motor
Famous Yukon Town
Buried by Dredge*
Dawson City, T. T.—The famous
old placer town of Bonanza, better
known as Grand Forks, located at
the junction of Bonanza and El­
dorado creeks, 13 miles from Daw-
son, has been burled deep from mor­
tal vision by the big dredge* of
modern gold mining companies. At
one time Bonanza had 2,000 Inhabi­
tants and was the center of trad*
for 1,000 more. Today the town la
covered with gravel, thrown aside
by the giant dredges.
Mor-Tone Sound
Service
ADJACENT TO THEATRE
PHONE 121