THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 3, 183«.
FARM CO-OPERATIVE DIVISION I
A
MESSAGE
WESTLAND GRANGE
ELECTS OFFICERS
Officers for the ensuing year were
elected Monday night at the regu
lar meeting of the Westland Grange
with 38 members present. Floyd
Laird was named master, E. H. Dun
ning, overseer; Mrs. E. H. Dunning,
lecturer; Wm. Harris, steward; Har
old Laird, assistant steward; Mrs
Jess Prindle, chaplain; Clarence
Berry, treasurer; Mrs. Margaret See-
liger, secretary; Sam Keikkala, gate
keeper; Mrs. Loretta Mulkins, Ceres,
Mrs. Floyd Laird, Pomona; Sophia
Keikkala, Flora; and Mrs. Clarence
Berry, lady assistant steward.
Members of the executive commit
tee are Frank Seeliger, Joe Corliss
and C. A. Lynch. Miss Helen Dunn
ing will be pianist for the year. Ini
tiation of these officers will probab
ly be held jointly with some other
grange the first week in December.
A degree team was organized and
will hold practice November 9th.
The ladies will make up the first de
gree and the men will have charge
of the second degree. Installation
will be held on November 16th for
several of the members. Three new
members were obligated Monday
night and will receive the work
soon.
Dancing was enjoyed later in the
evening and refreshments were
served by the Home Economics club
with Mrs. Laird as chairman. A
peace program will be featured in
connection with the next meeting
to be held November 16th.
CANNING NEXT
THURSDAY
The Cannery will be open for can
ning next Thursday, November 12.
Bring in anything you have to can,
such as meat, squash or pumpkin,
kraut or any other product you may
have. Do not come in later than
10:00 o’clock, and try to bring as
large a quantity as possible as we
do not intend to run the cannery at
very frequent intervals.
Close at Five O’Clock.
PAGE FIVF
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
TO
EVERY MEMBER.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ profits, we regret that Dr. Morrison
did not take the positive step of de
CO-OP GLEANINGS
By E. H. Dunning.
•
----------
scribing and advocating specifical
a cooperative
economic system which will elimi
nate private-profits and thus pre
vent not only war and crime but un
employment and poverty. He and
other national peace leaders should
be challenged to be specific in de
scribing to their followers the type
of an economic system necessary to
replace our present private-profit
competitive system.
• ly, as does Kagawa,
The railroads are in a quandry.
They instituted a suit against the
reduction in rates and now find that
the reduction has Increased their
revenues. It's just too bad that they
had to be shown up as incapable of
acting voluntarily even in their own
best interests and had to be forced
to do so by the government. There
may not be so much of that great
virtue of initiative in private busi
ness after all.
New York City has again had the
honor of entertaining a youthful
visitor from the West, this time in
the person of Miss Erma Young from
Choteau, Montana, winner of a
prize essay contest on the subject,
"Why I Want to See New York."
She has discovered that for every
three young people in Montana who
have an opportunity to go to col
lege eight have the same opportuni
ty in New York City. So she ex
pressed her hope for equal opportu
nity by saying, "I can’t help wish
ing that some of the New Yorkers
and other wealthy Easterners, part
or all of whose wealth has come
from the mines and ranches and
lumber and all industries of Monta
na, would give some thought to the
young people of our State.” We re
spect such “wishful thinking” but
would challenge Montana citizens to
do more than beg New Yorkers to
give back to them a fraction of the
wealth they have given away. We
would challenge Montana citizens,
as well as those of every other State,
to take upon themselves the respon
sibility of the ownership of their
own resources. We challenge them
to re-organize all their industries
and utilities into Cooperatives owned
and controlled by themselves as con
sumers, producers and citizens. By
organizing Consumers and Producers
Cooperatives and by voting for Pub
lic Ownership of Utilities, Monta
nans and the residents of every oth
er state can keep the ownership of
the wealth they produce at home in
their own pockets, instead of curs
ing New York and other financial
centers with excess riches and them
selves with poverty.
CONSUMERS'
COOPERATIVES
IN ACTION
CHICAGO—National Cooperatives,
Inc., took definite action to set up a
national office in Chicago at the
meeting of the board of directors of
the cooperative business federation
here September 2. Ivan Lanto, for
years head buyer for Central Coop
erative Wholesale, Superior, was se
lected as manager of the national
office and will take over the posi
tion October 1.
LOS ANGELES—Sir Fred Hay
ward and A. V. Alexander of the
British Cooperative Union addressed
an enthusiastic crowd of 400 assem
bled at the Clifton Cafeteria August
30. “We distributed a hundred mil
lion pounds worth of goods last year
through our Cooperative Wholesale
Society. We have never made a mil
lionaire. We shall never make a
pauper,” declared Sir Fred Hayward,
President of the Cooperative Union
while describing the operation of
the British cooperatives.
SUPERIOR—Central Cooperative
Wholesale, described in "Consumer
Cooperation in America” as The
Cornerstone in the North, continued
breaking records in June and July
boosting total sales to 31,489.496
for the seven months period. Sav
ings made by wholesale activities
were the highest in the history of
the cooperative.
The Farm Bureu Co-operative and
the Grange Co-operative now close
MINNEAPOLIS—Another record
at 5:00 o'clock regularly instead of
The failure of the peace move month in July brought Midland Co
6:00 o’clock. Patrons are asked to ments of the past is bringing more operative Wholesale’s total sales for
note the change in closing time and
realism into the thinking of their the first seven months of 1936 to
get their orders in early.
leaders. Perhaps as much as any 2,599 carloads of light oils, an in
other American, Dr. C. C. Morrison, crease of 23.3% over the same per
Farm Auxiliary Will Entertain.
editor of Christian Century and the iod last year. Sales of all commodi
The ladies of the Farm Bureau new quarterly Christendom, was re ties reached 31,661,532 which rep
Auxiliary will entertain Friday af sponsible for laying the groundwork resented a gain of 35% over the
ternoon, November 6th. honoring leading up to the signing of the first seven months of 1935.
Mrs. H. T. Clark at a handkerchief Kellogg Peace Pact of Paris. Now
HARRISBURG, PENN.— On Aug
shower as a feature of the reguls r he reveals his disillusionment over
meeting. Mrs. ClarV will leave Co- government action in one of his ust 5 the first poles were set for the
lumbia district scon and she is be usual powerful articles in Christen Northwestern Rural Electric Coop
ing honored as a memhor and past dom under the title "The End of the erative Association, Crawford Coun
president. A pot lick dinner will be Peace Movement.” "Why is it,” he ty. the first rural electric co-op in
served at noon and the afternoon asks, "that our governments are un- the state. After a bitter struggle
a" Ie to bring consummation the with private profit utilities, plans
spent in qt ftin".
peace hopes of their peoples?” Then were completed for the construction
answering his own question, he de of 124 miles of line at an estimated
GRANGE CO-OP
clared. “It Is because our political cost of 3114,000. Four thousand
MEETING
governments are not our real gov members will be served by the coop-
ernments.
Our governments are ; erative.
The Grange Co-operative announ themselves governed. There is an
INDIANAPOLIS—The Farm Bu
ces a meeting to be held in the invisible government behind our
governments—it is pur economic reau Oil Company Cooperative has
Union church at 8:00 p. m. Monday. system. The economic system is added to its membership the Grange
November 9th, to elect one director vastly more powerful than our poli- League Federation, operating in
to fill the vacancy left through the tPc! system. Our political govern New York and New Jersey, the Ma
death of Levi Wooster, and to vote ment is but an instrument, a tool, ryland Farm Bureau Federation and
on amended byllaws and articles of of economic forces. And these eco the Farmers Cooperative Exchange
nomic forces inherently make for doing business in North Carolina.
association.
war. Governments may make pled The Farm Bureau Oil Company is
ges of peace, governments may set now serving cooperative organiza
SECOND TURKEY
up institutions of peace, but these tions in Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylva
may at any time be overthrown by nia, Kentucky and Michigan. The
POOL SHIPMENT
the spirit of war which dwells in Farm Bureau Oil Company is a mem
the body of our capitalistic econo ber of National Cooperatives. Inc.,
The second turkey pool shipment my. So long as the nations are in which is in turn a member of The
for the fall market made through the control of an economic order Cooperative League.
the Eastern Oregon Turkey Grow which produces war by its own in
TILLAMOOK. Oregon—When the
ers’ association will be made Novem herent operation, the feeling of
ber 15th and 16th. Birds will be helplessness will haunt the govern private oil companies launched a
brought to the growers’ warehouse ments of the world as it now haunts price here recently, the Farmers’ Co-
in Hermiston. Receiving is neces the hearts of the peace workers . . . operative reduced the price to whole
sary on Sunday in order to reach our governments have proven un sale cost. When the price went still
the markets in time for the Thanks equal to the burden which the peace lower, a sign was hung on the co-op
movement has laid upon them . . . pump advising the members to buy
giving trade.
Growers are cautioned not to kill they cannot keep the pledges which gas from the price-cutting compa
birds before they are mature since they have made, because they are nies. Needless to say. the "war” did
there will be anothr shipment No not their own masters but are them not last long after that. The Tilla
vember 30th and December 1st. Al selves controlled by forces In the mook co-op formed only a year ago.
so another shipment two weeks toils of a system controlled by forces includes in Its membership nearly
later. This will make three ship more powerful than themselves. The half of the 900 producers of the
economic system, we are beginning County Creamery Association, which
ments before Christmas.
The largest volume is usually re to see. holds war as the clouds hold operates 18 cheese factories in
. war is inherent in a northwestern Oregon. The group
ceived the first day and growers lightning
are urged to be prompt and on sch laissez faire, profit-motivated eco started business with a debt of
edule. If this is carried out receiv nomic system ... the structure of 33.000. In nine months half of the
ing will be done only one day and peace cannot stand so long as its debt has been paid off. Commodi
foundation rests In an economic or ties handled are gas. oil. tires and
a hali
A total of 1601 dressed turkeys, der which Is Itself inherently war farm equipment.
totaling 22,546 pounds, were ship like.” While such positive declara
WALLA WALLA, W b .—Pacifie
ped through an early pool held in tions of national peace leaders are
October. The volume of these birds of great value In convincing Ameri- Supply Cooperative launched Its own
were shipped by New Madden and ci of the direct relationship between newspaper. The Pacific Northwest
from the De Moss flock of 2700 war and private-profits and the ne Cooperator. July 1. The appearance
birds. These were the only early cessity of destroying the economic of The Cooperator increases the
roots of war by eliminating private number of journals published by co
birds raised on the project.
operative associations affiliated with 15 FINE WOOL EWES FOR SALE—
Emmett Cooney, Hermiston. Ore.
The Cooperative League to fifteen
9-3p
with a total circulation well over
half a million. We welcome the Co
WANTED—POSITION AS PRACT1-
operator to thia distinguished com
cal nurse or housekeeper. Tele
pany.
phone 561, Hermiston.
9-3tp
WANT ADS
BOARD AND ROOM—INQUIRE AT
Herald office.
11-tfc
FURNISHED APARTMENTS AND
rooms—One batch room on first
floor; 2-roomed apartment on sec
ond floor; Central Rooms, Katty
Cornered from depot.
11-ltc
FOR SALE — POLE STACKER,
mower, spring and spike tooth po
tato planter, wagon, pitcher pump,
shovel plow, fresno, Home Comfort
range, etc.; L. Pearson, 1 mi. north
of Cold Springs reservoir.
11-tc
FOR SALE OR TRADE— WEANER
pigs. J. J. Knox, Hermiston, 4 ml.
east on Diagonal road.
ll-3tp
FURNITURE HOTEL STANFIELD
Circulatin'g heater and ranges, bed
sets, cooking utensils and dishes,
canned fruit, mattresses, and other
articles. Ed Morgan, Stanfield. ll-3p
WANTED—»FRESH YOUNG TEST-
ed cow. Also chickens. Write Mrs.
Wm. DeVore, Pendleton, Ore. 11-ltp
FOR SALE—DAIRY COWS, FEED-
er pigs, horses and colts, farm
machinery. Mrs. C. E. Baker, Her
miston.
ll-3tc
50 LEGHORN PULLETS, NOW 13
weeks old, 55c each. Inquire Ellis
Feed Store.
10-ltc
LOST — TIRE AND WHEEL FOR
Chevrolet truck on Butter Creek
highway. E. L. Hooker, Hermiston.
10-ltp
FOR SALE — CHESTER WHITE
Brood Sow, and 1 work mare.
Buck Winters, Hermiston.
10-ltp
APARTMENTS AND ROOMS —
running water— One small room
with stove. Central Rooms, Katty
Cornered from depot.
10-3tp
Notice to the Public.
My wife Marie B. Hendrick left
my bed and board, without just
cause or provocation, June, 1921. I
will not pay any bills or debts in-
curred ty her.
Geo. E. Hendrick, Irrigon, Or.
Oct. 15-Nov. 5)__
TO TRADE—TWO BLACK GELD-
NOTICE OF HEARING UPON
ings; weight between 1400 and
1500 lbs.; age 4 or 6 yrs.; sound;
FINAL REPORT
broke gentle; to trade for dairy
heifers, weaning time to 2 yrs. old; IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE
Call 5F2 Heppner, or write H. E.
STATE OF OREGON FOR UMA
Vinson, Lena, Ore.
10-3tp
TILLA COUNTY.
In the matter of the estate of Ern-
NOTICE OF HEARING UPON
est K. McCown, deceased.
FINAL REPORT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE the undersigned executrix of the last
STATE OF OREGON FOR
will and testament of Ernest K. Mc
UMATILLA COUNTY.
Cown, deceased, has filed her final
In the Matter of the Estate of George report with the clerk of the above
entitled court, and that the judge of
E. Wagner, Deceased.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that said court has designated Friday,
the undersigned administratrix of November 20th, 1936, at 10:00 o’
the estate of George E. Wagner, de
ceased, has filed her final report clock a. m , at the rooms of the above
with the Clerk of the above entitled entitled court in the county court
Court, and that the Judge of said house in Pendleton. Umatilla Coun
Court has designated Saturday, the ty, Oregon, as the place when and
28th day of November, 1936, at 2:00
o'clock in the afternoon as the time, where hearing is to be had thereon.
and the rooms of the above entitled All persons interested are hereby no-
court in the County Court House in tifid to then and there appear and
Pendleton, Umatilla County, Oregon, show cause, if any they have, why
as the place when and where hear said report should not be approved,
ing is to be had thereon. All per
sons interested are hereby notified the executrix discharged and the
to then and there appear and show estate closed.
cause, if any they have, why said re
Dated this 22nd day of October,
port should not be approved, the ad 1936.
ministratrix discharged, her bonds
BETH McCOWN, Executrix.
men exhonorated and the estate
(Oct. 22-Nov. 19.)
closed.
------•=
Dated this 29th day of October,
1936.
LAND SALE NOTICE
Alice E. Wagner,
Administratrix. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That
(Oct. 29-Nov. 26)
the undersigned, Sheriff of Uma
tilla County, Oregon, by virtue of
TAKEN UP NOTICE.
an order duly made and entered
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that herein by the County Court of the
I have taken up and have kept for State of Oregon, for Umatilla Coun
about 7 days at my ranch 7 miles
east of Hermiston the following de ty, on the 19th day of October, 1936,
will on the 21st day of November,
scribed animal:
1 Holstein bull, no brand, white 1936, at the hour of ten o’clock in
feet and forehead, white spot over the forenoon, sell to the highest bid
shoulders, white spot over rump. der upon the following terms, to-
Said animal will be sold, unless wit: 20% in cash at the time of
redeemed, at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash in hand on sale, balance at the rate of 35.00 per
the 14th day of November, 1936, at month, all deferred payments to bear
the above described ranch at 10:00 interest at the rate of six per cent
o’clock A. M.
per annum, payable annually, at the
Dated at Hermiston, Oregon, on front door of the Umatilla County
this 29th day of October, 1936.
Court House in Pendleton, Oregon,
Signed, GEO. L. CHALLIS.
subject to a minimum price of
3205.00 therefor, the following de
scribed parcels of land, in one lot,
heretofore by Umatilla County, Ore
gon, acquired for delinquent taxes,
to-wit:
SE ‘ of NE % Section 22, Twp.
5, N. R. 28, EWM, Umatilla County,
Oregon.
R. E. GOAD, Sheriff
of Umatilla County, Oregon.
(Oct. 22-Nov. 19)
Remember
On these Cold,
Winter Mornings
That We Have
Fall and Winter Goods
HEAVY COATS
OVERSHOES
RUBBERS
CAPS
WOOL SOCKS
MITTENS
HEAVY SHIRTS
BLANKETS
UNDERWEAR
GLOVES
Attorney-At-Law
■
Stanfield
Oregon
FARMERS AUTOMOBILE
Inter-INSURANCE Exchange
C. A. JACKMAN, Local Agent
All Kinds of Auto and Truck
Insurance
Hermiston - -
Oregon
Our Stock Is Now Complete!
DR
Burnham & Burnham
Dry Goods
SYLVANUS SMITH, JR.
Hermiston
A
E
MARBLE
CHIROPRACTOR
Office: Two doors west post office
Office Hours: 8 to 12 - 1:30 to $
Phone 481 — — Hermiston. Ore.
Hermiston Post No. 37
Meets first and third
Thursday. Legion Auxll
lary meets second and
fourth Thursday.
Legion Hall.
W. L. Morgan, D. M. D.
/ •
/.
y.
-r
- . -
L.
General Dentistry
X-Ray and Diagnosis
Bank Bldg.
Phono 9-3
Residence Phone 25-J
Sunday and Evenings by
Appointment
Dr. A. C. Willcutt
OSTEOPATHIC
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
OSBORN APARTMENTS
PETERSON & PETERSON
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
U. S. National Bank Building
Practice In State * Federal Courts
Pendleton, Ore.
DR. F. B. BELT
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office Hours:
Other
10:30 to 12:30 A.M.
Hours by
2 to 5 P.M.
Appointment
Res. 712 — PHONE — Office 733
NOTHING IDES SO MUCH
FOR SO LITTLE
W. J. WARNER
THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AMD TELEGRAP: CCMAPA:
MAIN STREET
PHONE Oil
Attorney-at-Law
Hermiston - Oregon