The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, May 28, 1936, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE HERMISTON HERALD. HERMISTON. OREGON.
PAGE TWO
METHODIST EPISCOPAL’CHURCH
in other ways as well. It follows:
R. R. Finkbeiner, Pastor.
Grant me a steady hand and watch­
Worship at 10:00 A. M. and Sun­
ful eye.
Published every Thursday at Hermis- |
ton, Umatilla County, Oregon, by | That no man shall be hurt when I day school at 10:50 each Sunday.
Pauline M. Stoop and Alfred Quiring,
Epworth League at 7:00 P. M. and
pass by.
Publishers.
____________________ _
the evening evangelistic service at
Entered as Second Class Matter Thou gavest life, and I pray no act 8:00.
December, 1906, Umatilla County,
of mine
A meeting of the Ladies Aid on
Oregon.____________________________ May take away or mar that gift of
every first and third Wednesday In
Subscription Rates.
thine.
the month.
One Year ..........
$1.00
Shelter
those, dear Lord, who bear
The Pioneer League meets every
Six Months .................
.75
Three Months ........
50
me company.
Sunday night, a league for boys and
From the evils of fire and all cal­ girls from nine to fourteen.
amity.
THURSDAY. MAY 28. 193«.
Uhe Germtston Grralb
Teach me to use my car for others’
need,
Nor miss through love of speed
The beauties of thy world; that
Exalt the citizen, make him self-
thus I may,
respecting, self-reliant and responsi­ With joy and courtesy go my way.
ble."—Henry W. Grady.
The front page of the Oregonian
of Wednesday morning carried an
illustrated picture of Elmer David­
son, 18-year-old prisoner at Louis­
ville, Ky., who had been foiled in
his attempt at suicide by guards.
His features were distorted by anger
and pain and was not a pleasant
sight to behold. Why should such
human emotions of those less for­
túnate than the average citizen
should be given prominence in one
of our state metropolitan daily pa-
pers is difficult to understand. It
is neither educational nor elevating.
It may be necessary for a news­
paper to cater to a class of readers
who would prefer such publicity
but undoubtedly the majority prefer
a more elevating trend.
Few of us have outgrown the cir­
cus—the smell of the wild animals
and dust, the trapese performances,
the trick horses, the daring Hon
trainer, the elephants and the blare
of the circus band hold their at­
traction for both old and young. The
Al G. Barnes circus was complete in
variety, fulfilling Its publicity that
told of eighteen tons of elephant
flesh, twenty Hons and tigers, doz­
ens of beautifully trained horses
and hundreds of skilled performers.
The whole show brought back mem-
orles of our first circus which closed
in the flurry of a thunder storm
mingled with the roar of the lions.
The section of the Butter Creek
highway between the Echo road and
Hermiston Is being prepared for oil­
ing. Last summer the road was near
ly impassable because of ruts caused
by the heavy traffic. Local peopole
have worked faithfully to bring
about this oiling work and are to
be congratulated.
The Motorist's Prayer.
“Grant me a steady hand and
watchful eye, that no man shall be
hurt when I pass by,” starts The
Motorist’s Prayer. The prayer first
appeared in the London Church
Times.
The prayer Is a reminder that
good driving is a Christian obliga-
tion, and the moral may be applied
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES
«CIOUL AND BODY” was the
subject of the Lesson-Ser­
mon in all Churches of Christ,
Scientist, on Sunday, May 24.
The Golden Text was, "Dearly
beloved, I beseech you as strang­
ers and pilgrims, abstain from
fleshly lusts, which war against
the soul” (I Peter 2:11).
Among the citations which com-
prised the Lesson-Sermon was
the following from the Bible: “For
our conversation is in heaven;
from whence also we look for the
Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ:
Who shall change our vile body,
that it may be fashioned like unto
his glorious body, according to the
working whereby he is able even
to subdue all things unto himself”
(Phil. 3:20, 21).
The Lesson-Sermon also includ­
ed the following correlative pass­
ages from the Christian Science
textbook, “Science and Health
with Key to the Scriptures”, by
Mary Baker Eddy: “Mortal mind
and body are one. Neither ex­
ists without the other, and both
must be destroyed by immortal
Mind . . . When you say, 'Man’s
body Is material,’ I say with Paul:
’Be willing rather to be absent
from the body, and to be present
with the Lord.’ Give up your ma­
terial belief of mind in matter, and
have but one Mind, even God; for
this Mind forms its own likeness"
(PP- 177, 216).
1
CHÜRCH KOTES
FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
Grace Trumbull, Pastor.
Sunday school 10:00 a. m.
We invite you to attend the ser­
vices conducted by the Weller Sis­
ters of Yakima, Wn. Special music
every evening.
PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH
Lawson H. Flora, Pastor.
Regular Sunday services as fol­
lows:
Sunday School at 9:45 A. M.
Preaching at 11:00 A. M.
Young People’s meeting, 7:00 PM
Evangelistic service 7:45 P. M.
Everyone is Invited to attend these
services.
BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday school at 10:00 A. M.
Classes for all ages. A welcome to
all. The Ladies Aid meets on the
second and fourth Wednesdays of
each month.
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Columbia School
Evangelist Glen C. Wade, Minister.
Weather Report.
Bible School at 10:00 A. M.
Max. Min.
Sermon and Communion 11:00 A. M. Date
21
May
.................................
75 .
49
Evangelistic Service, 8:00 P. M.
May 22
80 .... 50
May 23
84 . .. 42
HERMISTON UNION CHURCH
May 24
C. R. Moore, Minister
May 25
95 .... 45
Bible School 10:00 a. m.
May 26
100 .... 50
11:00 A. M., The pastor will deliver May 27
92 .... 63
his farewell sermon to the church.
Text, Acts 20:32.
Painting Activities Many.
Christian Endeavor 6:45 p. m.
number
of local business fronts
8:00 P. M.
Union service for
and
houses
are
being painted and
4-H clubs of the district. The 4-H
members will give the special music remodeled. The Wm. Shaar home
and have a part in the opening pro­ south of town has a new coat of
gram. The sermon will be especially paint and the shingles on the roof
for 4- h club members, The public have been painted an attractive red.
is cordially invited to attend these The A. H. Norton home will also
soon have a new paint coat. The
services.
Fellowship meeting the first Fri- Red & White store and Amsberry’s
store each have a dark shade of red
day night of each month.
Missionary meeting second Wed- paint on the business front. A green
and white paint combination is be­
nesday of each month.
ing put on the Co-operative Service
Ladies Aid Wednesday of each
Station, and the interior is being
week except second Wednesday.
calsomined and painted. A coat of
The public is cordially invited to
paint
will soon be put on the audi-
attend these services.
torium/building, which is being used
by the Square Deal Produce com-
pany.
STORE CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY — MAY 30th.
t
Headquarters for Picnic Supplies!
Potato Chips
s
43
Fresh & Crisp sp
Packages
......
Ripe Olives
Large Olives
Tall Cans — Each
BRONSONS
• I
Mustard
Ritz Crackers
LARGE PACKAGE
MARTINI BUTTER
CRACKERS ....
Deviled Meat
5c and 10c
VIENNA SAUSAGE
• a
EACH
4%
Coffee
15c
MAXWELL HOUSE
Vita-Fresh
Lb....................
4
a
Pork & Beans
57c
Lbs.
Van Camp's
Large Size Cans
Van Camp's
Medium Size Can
Flour
FANCY DESIGNED
Paper Plates
AND CUPS
In Cellophane
Package
12c
Pint Jar .
POPPY BRAND
A hard wheat flour.
49
Lbs.
$1.39
Juices
lOc
PINEAPPLE & GRAPE FRUIT
Cans
Napkins
In Assorted Cello
Packages
EACH
10c
Lime Rickey
FOX BRAND
12 os. Bottles
g * A-
EACH
We
Tomato Juice
Libby's
oE
an D
3 Tall Cans
Peanut Butter
THOMPSONS
School Boy Brand
Pounds
GRO
ER
STANFIELD NEWS
t
By Sophronla Rhea
Miss Sophronia Rhea returned
home Saturday evening after at­
tending Grand Lodge in Roseburg,
which was in session last week.
Claude McCall is indisposed at his
home this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mathews were
visiting in Stanfield Friday evening
enroute to their home in Elgin from
Parkdale. Mrs. Mathews will be re­
membered as Laura Wallace, and
has been teaching in Parkdale.
Miss Blanche Thorsen, a teacher
in The Dalles, is home for the sum­
mer vacation. The Dalles school be­
ing out Friday.
Ed Attebury is now employed at
the McCall Pastime.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Cronkeitt moved
their variety store to Carlton. Ore.
The CCC boys defeated the local
town team in the baseball game
Sunday.
Miss Viola Denny. superviser in
art at the Fernwood school in Port­
land arranged an art display in the
Meier & Frank store window re­
cently. Announcement of the display
was broadcast over the N. W. sta­
tion from Portland.
Girls Baseball Team Makes
Progress; Class Games
Prove Interesting
Quitter
By HAZEL R. LANGDALE
© McClure Newspaper Syndicate.
WNU Service.
T WAS springtime.
Soft winds
blew through meadows bright with
the drift of lupines. Creeks spilled
over their banks as melting snows
from distant slopes rushed torrential-
ly through them.
Jan Connors stood In the doorway
of his single-storied, unpainted shack,
casting speculative glances over his
section. He was a tall, gaunt, sandy-
haired young man, and his chin was
very square. He was mentally divid­
ing his property into so much grazing
land, so much corn, so much wheat.
Mostly so much wheat. A good year
would retrieve the disasters of three
previous years, and would reconcile
Andrea to hanging on a spell longer.
Meanwhile what she lived on—and
he was well aware of it—was the
promise she had wrung from him In
one of his rare moments of dlscourag-
ment.
“Stick with me one more year,
sweetheart. If chis year's crop falls,
I’ll quit and go home. I give you my
word.”
Three successive seasons had there
been of ruined acres. Drouth, wind,
grasshoppers. In Andrea’s mind, the
last had been by far the worst Never
would she forget the sickening little
devils which had blotted out the en­
tire header as she drove It, had
crunched under her feet as she stepped
from table to sink, had dropped into
her hair from beams and door lintel.
Constantly, as day succeeded day,
Andrea pondered the chances of Jan's
wheat this year. She was convinced
that it would be better for Jan, for
her, for the children they hoped to
have, to go back to Jan’s home in Ohio
where he could step into his father’s
shoes when the old man died.
The wheat prospered, growing tall
and golden. From their low doorway
Jan and Andrea looked out each day
upon a yellow sea that billowed In the
perpetual prairie wind.
The morning came when Jan drove
to town to make arrangements for its
purchase, its storing In the red grain
elevator beside the tracks, its harvest­
ing. He would be gone until nearly
sundown and Andrea felt a certain re­
lease with his absence. After all, a
one-room shack is a small place to
hold two people who are not In com-
píete accord.
In the late afternoon she saw a
dark cloud lift above the horizon. A
thunderstorm? Wind? Please, Heav­
en. send lightning out of that black­
ness to set tire to the wheat !
The cloud shifted to the south and
with It passed her hopes.
Andrea flung herself upon her knees
on the so<| doorstep. “Please, dear
God,” she prayed, "please send hail or
lightning or fire right now!”
But tlie golden wheat continued to
dip and wave, wave and dip, in the
prairie wind.
“If only I dared!” She spoke the
words aloud. The very sound of her
voice gave her courage, and she went
right on defiantly. “If I only dared,
I’d set tire to the wheat myself, Jan
would never know, nnd if he ever did
find out. he would thank me for it!”
Five minutes later she was flying
along the road with a box of matches
in her apron pocket.
At a point not too near the house
she crossed the plowed strip and
plunged into the forest of wheat
stalks. Immediately becoming part of
them. The wind would carry the
flames away from the buildings and
what little wheat lay between would
not be burned.
She took the match box from her
pocket and something like a sigh
seemed to stir the grain. She frowned.
Why. the wheat was a huge creature.
It was vital. In it was life to be
passed on to other lives. She had
never thought of that before. Of
wheat, as a growing, living entity. To
burn It would he like committing mur-
der. Did she want to commit murder
Just to get herself out of a tight spot?
And had she any God-given right to
decide for Jan what was best for him?
She thrust the matches back into her
pocket. "Quitter!” she called herself
savagely. "Quitter!" Turning, she
rnn and saw that Jan's wagon was a
speck on the long white road that fell
and rose to the horizon.
He seemed tired. His eyes were
strained. But be flung a check Into
Andren's lap. “I got my price, and it's
darn’ good. But I'm going to quit
right now. I said I’d quit If we failed,
but I’d rather go back after making
good."
She threw her arms about his neck.
Tears filled her blue eyes. “Let's stay,
Jannie. Let’s stay. At least until It's
grasshoppers again !”
COURAGEi
It Takes a Lot of Courage to Break
a Bad Habit and mighty
little to start a Good One.
BANK
BOOK
|
k
I
THE HABIT OF REGULAR
“EVERY WEEK” SAVING,
IS A PROFITABLE ONE.
START AT ONCE!
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of Hermiston
Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits Over «50,000.
F. B. SWAYZE, President
A. H NORTON, Cashier
R. ALEXANDER, Vice-President 1 ;
KENNETH M. MAYER. Assistant ' •
DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED BY THE FEDERAL
DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION.
MAE WEST FILM TAKES
STAR TO FROZEN NORTH
Not even heavy fur swathings
can rob Mae West of a bit of her
charm and allure.
This is proven by her new film,
"Klondike Annie,” which comes to
the Oasis theatre Sunday for a three
day engagement. West, in the froz­
en reaches of the Arctic, is wrapped
from head to foot in enormous rolls
of fur. The fact that she is every bit
as fascinating and appealing speaks
volumes for the personality which
has captured for her the admiration
of millions of motion picture fans
throughout the country.
op******0 • •
t COLUMBIA NEWS t
By MARIJANE HAMMER.
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Hughes visited
at the Lorn Hughes home in Stan­
field Monday evening.
Mrs. J. H. Pearson was a visitor
at the Roy Pearson home Saturday.
Lois Sanderson of La Grande is
spending the week with Nellie
Hooker, who is her cousin.
Graduation exercises for the
eighth grade in Columbia school
were held Thursday evening. The
class consisted of Naomi Beletski,
Clyde Beamer, Eugene Wells, Henry
Sommerer, Marion Beck and Floyd
Whitsett. After the exercises a play
was presented by the Columbia
school children.
An ice cream social was given
in Columbia park Saturday after­
noon. Those present were Mr. and
Mrs. Grey and children, John. Mar­
jory, Gertrude and Anna Patch, Ev­
elyn Cook, Buck Ogley, Davis Ver-
mon, Alice Fay and Mr. and Mrs.
Pearson, and Frank. Annie. Grace
and Jean Pearson.
W. A. Leathers visited here this
week. He is a former resident.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wilson and
family were dinner guests at the U.
A. Wilson home Sunday.
Gloria and Ted Pelletier visited
at the A. Christley home Sunday.
H. Hicks of Umatilla visited at
the Hooker home Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Loren Hughes and
family of Stanfield were dinner
guests of E. C. Hughes Monday.
Boardman Barber Shop
OPEN MONDAY of EACH WEEK
After 6:30 P. M.
SQUARE DEAL PRODUCE CO.
AUDITORIUM BLDG.
HERMISTON, ORE.
(Subject to Market Change)
Heavy Hens
over 4% lbs.
Leghorn Hens over 3% lbs.
Leghorn Hens under 3% lbs.
Leghorn Broileri to 1%2 lbs,
Heavy Springer 2 lbs. Up
EggS
-
56 lbs. and over
EggS
-
Under 56 lbs.
14c
11c
10c
11c
14c
15c
14c
“The Most Heroic Document”
On February 24. 1836, Col. William
B. Travia, commanding 150 Texans be-
sieged by an overwhelming Mexican
force in the Alamo, sent out what has
been called “the most heroic document
In American history.” After asking
reinforcements, Travis wrote: “I am
determined to sustain myself as long
as possible and to die like a soldier
who never forgets what is due to his
own honor or that of his country.” As
courageous as the heroes who died
when the Alamo fell, on March 6, were
their comrades who carried this and
other appeals for aid. With the tradì-
tional devotion to duty of all who
men's messages, they risked
death that others might live.
(From the Bulldog)
Some real work has been done in
girls’ baseball this season. The girls
who have made up the Hermiston
| high teams are as follows: Opal
Stockard,' Maxine Paul. Laura Con­
rad. Eleanor Steiner, Della Madden.
V era Sisson. Florence Johnson. Er-
| ma Thornburg. Thelma Swarner,
Josephine Moyer. Arilda Foster,
| Dorothy Knerr, and Virginia Dyer.
The team has played two games
It la recorded by ancient writers that
with Umatilla, each game ending
i with the local team one point short 360,000 men were employed for 20
I of having as much as the challenger. years to build one Egyptian pyramid.
Water hemlock
Whorled Milkweed
PUBLIC ENEMIES NO. 1 AND NO. 2 AMONG PLANTS
Study these weeds and learn to recognize them. It may save the life
of your cow—or yourself. The water hemlock, on the left, often is con­
fused with the wild parsnip, which is not poisonous. Yet water hemlock
is as deadly as a rattlesnake, ¡t is not native of semiarid climatee. but it
Is found along ditch banks and in moist places on irrigation projects.
Note the root, which has been split, has transverse chambers. This is a
sure way to recognize the water hemlock. Study its leaves. It will pay
you to know the water hemlock tor it is public enemy No. 1 among the
weeds. On the right is the whorled milkweed. Note the way leaves grow
around the stem. This weed is not as dangerous as water hemlock, but it
kills stock every now and then in the west. Get rid of it. It is public
enemy No. 2 among the weeds.