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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1937)
THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1937. CO-OPERATIVE DIVISION I 47 A MESSAGE TO The annual meeting of the Farm Bureau Co-operative of Hermiston will be held on the 12th day of February, 1937, at 2:00 o'clock in the afternoon at the Hermiston Union Church. Directors will be elected in Dis tricts Nos. 2, 4, 6 and 7. Nominat ing ballots are being mailed to the qualified voters in each district and the persons nominated in each dis trict will be voted upon by the qual ified voters present at the meeting. The person receiving the largest vote shall be the director from his district for a term of two years. The qualifications of a voter at the annual meeting are as follows: He must be a member of the Farm Bureau Co-operative of Hermiston and a member In good standing in either the Grange or the Farm Bu reau. HENRY M. SOMMERER. Secretary. (Jan. 28 - Feb. 4-11) Nominating ballots are being mailed to members in good standing in districts No. 2, 4, 6 and 7, of the Farm Bureau Co-operative of Her miston. No ballots will be mailed to any one not in good standing in their respective Grange or Farm Bu reau. HENRY M. SOMMERER, Sec. CERTIFICATES OF EQUITY BEING PAID THROUGH BROAD AND BEAUTIFUL ENTRYWAYS VISITORS WILL PASS TO THE NEW YORK FAIR EVERY MEMBER. NOTICE OF ANNUAL FEBRUARY TURKEY POOL SCHEDULED MEETING NOTICE PAGE FIVE THE HERMISTON HERALD. HERMISTON. OREGON. A final turkey pool for the season will be held by the Eastern Oregon Turkey Growers’ association Tues day, February 2nd, at the local warehouse. Growers have indicated that they will deliver enough birds to fill a half car. All birds must be delivered at the pool by noon Tuesday in order that the car may be ready to ship early. The association has shipped 23 car loads of turkeys from this ter ritory this season, and two cars have been shipped by individual growers. POMONA GRANGE IN PENDLETON, FEB. 4 The Pomona Grange will meet in Pendleton on Thursday, February 4th, with the business session open ing at 10:00 A. M., followed by a pot luck lunch served at noon. Mrs. Mabel Richards, Pomona lec turer, has announced that the after noon program will be open to the public, and will begin at 1:30. The main speaker will be Victor Shaw, director of public relations at Whit man College in Walla Walla. Mr. Shaw, she states, is a capable speak er whose views are interestingly presented. Mr. Shaw has been a successful writer of short stories which have appeared mainly in the Saturday Evening Post. Many other interesting features will be included tó make the pro gram well worth attending. Farm Bureau Auxiliary. FARM PRODUCTION FIGURES COMPILED Many and varied have been the estimates as to Oregon’s annual in come from agricultural sources. Some of these estimates have been found to take figures from Oregon's primary agricultural production and compare them with income from other industries after manufactur ing values have been added, and vice-versa. In an attempt to establish some authoritative basis for figuring ag ricultural income in this state, ex tension circular No. 300, by L. R. Breithaupt, extension economist, has just been issued, which is entitled, .‘Agricultural Income in Oregon— Sources and Trends." This bulletin showed that on the basis of 1929 figures, before rela tionships had been disrupted by de pression factors, crop and animal production represented approximate ly 75 per cent of the value of all primary production in Oregon. Of the total of $163,600,000 of cash farm income credited to that year, 38.4 per cent came from crop pro ducts. 40.6 per cent from animisi products, while 21 per cent was ad ded value through manufacturing or processing. The bulletin includes government figures on cash farm income in Ore gon from 1924 to 1935, and shows the approximate division among the various farm enterprises. Official government figures are in the main somewhat below actual income, it is believed, because o omission of im portant specialty crops, such as seeds, flax fiber, flower bulb, poul try as meat, and fur bearing ani mals. NEW YORK. (Special).—Forty thousand persons an hour —visitors from every state and every nation—must be ac commodated in comfort at but one of the entryways to the New York World s Fair of 1939. according to arrangements the Fair Corporation is completing to handle a maximum daily attendance of 800,000. The artist’s drawing, as repro duced above, calls for a magnificent double-decked entry- way with underpasses, overpasses, pedestrian walks, bus terminals, comfort stations and bridge connections assuring comfort while providing an area of architectural splendor. diets, particularly in the case of coast farmers who will have oppor tunity to improve or add to their permanent pasture lands without the necessity of any diversion. The convention this year went on record in support of the Oregon milk control law and its administration, favored a licensing law for bulls in public service as a means of elimi nating or regulating the scrub bull, favored compulsory cream grading if all elements in the industry can agree to a plan, urged a bill for the reporting of overrun by cream eries, and asked for additional funds to be aplied to research on the con trol of crumbly butter and a num ber of serious dairy animal diseases. George Fullenwider, Carlton, vet eran presiding officer of the asso ciation, was rousingly re-elected for his sixth term. Other officers chos en are Oscar Haag, Reedville, first vice-president; George Hampton, Arago, second vice-president; Roger Morse. O.S.C., secretary-treasurer; Byron DeYoung. Portland; Henry Sass, Richland; R. G. Anderson, Tillamook, and W. A. Johnson, Grants Pass, directors. Coos county was chosen as the next meeting place. Shown is a ramp leading from the exposition grounds to ward the I.R.T.-B.M.T. subway terminal, at a point where it is necessary to cross over the Long Island railroad track, and to avoid undue congestion of pedestrian traffic. Shown in the left foreground is a domed restaurant within a foun tain basin and a concourse bordered by grown plane-trees, and. nearer, an open-air cafe and an information kiosk. Along the flanking walls the artist has delineated the Fair’s world concept which looks to the building of a peaceful, happier World of Tomorrow. WANT ADS KEYTAINER WITH FIVE KEYS found at Rohrman Garage this week. Inquire at Herald office. 23-tfc WANT TO BUY—7 MEAN & DAN- gerous bulls, all breeds; 26 thin cows. Phone or write W. W. Hollo way, Pendleton, Ore. 22-ltc crease during the past year in vol ume of air mail material sent thru the local office. Get Your Lumber, Cement and Nails at Wholesale Prices by Ordering from J. C. HOSKINS. Stanfield, Ore. Phone 28F4 WATCH - CLOCK REPAIRING FOR SALE OR TRADE - A GOOD The Auxiliary of the Farm Bureau cow, fresh February 1st; can use On and after December 15, 1936, will meet Friday, February 5th, hay rake, spring tooth harrow. C. certificates of equity Nos. 84 to with Mrs. R. Ryland, Mrs. John Jen- A. W. BEHRMAN W. Ruping, Stanfield, close to depot. 294, inclusive, issue of 1926, will be drzejewski, Mrs. Grace Foster and WATCHMAKER 21-3tp paid at the office of the Farm Bu Mrs. Joe Udey as the entertainment HERMISTON OREGON reau Co-operative of Hermiston. committee. This will be the first FOR SALE—67 ACRES UNDER Certificates must be presented at meeting since December 4th because Portland, Jan. 27—Problems con cheap irrigation, around 45 & 60c time of payment, properly endorsed. of the bad weather. It is hoped fronting the dairying field in 1937 per acre. With 5-room house, large HENRY M. SOMMERER, there will be a fine group to permit will be the main topics of discussion porch and basement, granary, gar Secretary. the transaction of business. at the annual convention of the Ore age, barn, small orchard, shade trees, —Expert Radio Service— gon Dairy Cooperative association in gravel road, school bus, mail route, Portland next month, it was brought TWO DOORS EAST OF cream route by door. Price $2500 out at a special meeting of associa LEGION HALL - EAST MAIN down or good security, and federal tion delegates at the Multnomah loan of $3,000 on long easy pay hotel here. ments. Address A. N. Boggs, Echo, Leaders in the dairy industry Oregon. 22-3tp V. R. “Bob” RUNNION will be headlined speakers at the Al Kennings, who left two weeks The average price received per meetings and not only will discuss 300,000 POSITIONS - SOCIAL SE- FARM SALES AND LIVE STOCK ago for Davis, Cal., to take over the pound of butterfat was 34.1 cents, the problems faced but will outline curity Act creating thousands of A SPECIALTY uu ies as official dairy herd tester and the average feed cost per pound new production methods and latest openings for bookkeepers, account Make Dates at My Expense tor the Dairy Extension Service of ui Lutter at produced was 17.2 cents. developments in the field. ants, clerks, etc., for government, Heppner, Oregon Phone 452 California, January 18th, has com- .ci owing report is compiled state and industrial positions. Spec The convention will be here Feb piled the annual and average pro- for the benefit of the members of ruary 2 and will be attended by ial training now available. Write duction statistics for the entire as- the Umatilla Dairy Herd Improve- members of the association from Box 38, Hermiston Herald. 20-tfc FARMERS AUTOMOBILE sociation, and these ap,car below. ment association as well as other nine Oregon counties and three in Inter-INSURANCE Exchange ennings writes that he is em- dairymen who might be interested Washington. Representatives of the With final approval of rates for C. A. JACKMAN, Local Agent p'oyed as official tester for the agri- in production and feed cost statis- dairy industry of Oregon and Wash Oregon’s soil building practices and All Kinds of Auto and Truck « ltt ral ’ ranch of the University of tics. The first set of figures shows ington also will take part in the other details of the 1937 agricultu Insurance California, and that he will travel the monthly average production and sessions. ral conservation program, prelimi Hermiston - - Oregon over the state doing his work. His average feed cost of herds on test in Delegates attending the special nary organization work is moving Spokane, Wn. — Looking forward, rermanent address is in care of Ar- the Umatilla Dairy Herd Improve- meeting at the Multnomah hotel ahead rapidly for getting the plan thur Foler, Davis, Cal. ment association for the year 1936. nominated four district directors. into the hands of growers at the not backward, and keeping life's in DR A E MARBLE They will be installed at the con earliest possible date, according to terests always ahead, is the explana- CHIROPRACTOR tion offered by associates tor the vention for all are unopposed. F. L. Ballard, in charge of the ex Office: Two doors west post office long and busy career of L. C. Gilman S — * — 2 2 2 MEs 30 S P Those named were: Louis Minog- E 2383 85 82 48 25 303. tension service at Oregon State col Officr Hours: 8 to 12 - 1:30 to 6 gie of Sauvies Island, Multnomah lege. If present plans are carried of Seattle, who retired as vice presi and Columbia counties; Henry Hagg through, actual work of collecting dent of the Great Northern railway ; Phone 481-------- Hermiston. Ore. ion January 28th, his 80th birthday. of Reedville, southwest Washington new work sheets in the counties o ° r • For considerably more than a dec I • 0 _ ′ 1 | and Yamhill counties; Martin Stau should begin early In February, of Hermiston fost No. 37 ade Mr. Gilman has astounded those ber of Canby, Clackamas and north JAN.......... 522.0 25.8 »11.43 »4.07 $1.38 »5.45 »5.98 »1.04 21.1c ficials believe. Meets first and third who have worked with him by his FEB. ..... 475.6 23.8 11.38 4.10 1.47 5.57 5.81 1.17 23.4c Marion counties, and Jim Ferguson C. C. Conser, assistant to George Thursday. Legion Auxil mental alertness and progressive MAR......... 534.1 28.8 11.04 4.07 1.60 5.67 5.37 1.06 1.96c of Woodland, Wn., west half of Co E. Farrell, director of the western iary meets second and thinking in the face of mounting APR.......... 576.3 25.5 10.10 3.21 1.48 4.69 5.41 .813 18.4c lumbia and Cowlitz counties. division, arrived in Oregon soon af fourth Thursday years, as well as by his ability to MAY . 6 6 4.4 28.9 1 0.4 2 2.15 1.0 6 3.2 1 7.21 .4 8 4 11.1c Oregon counties on the Dairy Co ter the approval of the program to Legion Hall. JUNE .. . 616.2 27.1 10.14 2.00 .89 2.89 7.25 .469 10.7c operative membership list are Co confer with state committeemen and stay in the harness and carry on at I a pace that would do credit to any JULY .... 624.2 27.7 11.57 2.18 .96 3.14 8.43 .500 11.4c lumbia. Washington. Yamhill, Polk, members of the technical committee I AUG.......... 585.9 26.3 11.92 2.29 1.09 3.38 8.54 .577 12.8c Multnomah, Linn, Marion, Clark and the extension service staff at much younger man. Only from his W. L. Morgan. D. M D SEPT........ 523.2 24.4 10.48 2 61 1.15 3.76 6.72 .719 15.4c and Benton. Washington counties Corvallis on interpretation and ap | health have the years been able to General Dentistry and plication of new features of this exact any toll. OCT. ___ 485.9 23.7 10.51 3.06 1.19 4.25 6.26 .876 17.9c included are Cowlitz, Clark X-Ray and Diagnosis The retiring vice president will be NOV. ___ 457.4 22.5 9.66 3.54 1.30 4.84 4.82 1.06 21.5c eastern Skamania. year’s program. Before doing this, succeeded by Thomas Balmer, wes Bank Bldg. Phone 9-J DEC.......... 516.5 24.5 10.25 4.28 1.33 5.61 4.64 1.09 22.8c however, he was taken on a tour of tern counsel for the Great Northern, Reeldence Phone 25-J inspection of recently reseeded The following figures show the tal and average, and the feed cost whom Mr. Gilman employed as a Sunday and Evenings by burnt-over lands in southwestern individual herd production, both to-lper pound of butterfat produced: stenographer in 1907. Appointment Oregon, so he would have first hand information on what is expected to The dairy industry of the nation be an important factor of the new +5 , m in • e . O . S c S3 is not likely to feel much effect soil conservation work in this state. • 3 2 c E o o — MEMBER either way of the AAA program in e • O 3 As soon as the state conference — O S O O k — the coming year, while the effect F = OSTEOPATHIC F O — " was completed, representatives of £ - £ O 1 [ for the future is still problematical, the state committee and the exten The greatest air mail year in its F PHYSICIAN A SURGEON delegates to the annual convention sion service embarked on a series of histpry was recorded by Oregon in OSBORN APARTMENTS Chas. Seeliger ......... .... 58 5,899.7 34,131 1,703.5 294.4 8.2 at Oregon State college were told six regional meetings at Portland. 1936 when its citizens sent 229.329 G. C. Wade .......... .... 41 17,717 2,768.5 1,003.2 148.3 15.3 by W. L. Teutsch, assistant county Corvallis. Roseburg. Redmond. Ar pounds of correspondence over the G. M. Madison 5,759.9 118 55,972 2,834.3 290.7 19.4 agent leader, who recently spent lington and Baker for county agents airways, it was reported today in of H. A. Hooker ......... .... 71 31,214 5.482.1 1,541.3 263.3 18.6 several weeks in Washington. D. C., ! and county committeemen. After ficial figures released by Postmaster PETERSON A PETERSON H. G. Moore ........... 5,371.8 182 81,223 3,917.5 257.7 15.4 working on the 1937 program. attending these, the county leaders Harvey DeMoss. ATTORNEYS AT LAW Alpha Christley 426 190.682 5.383.0 9,832.7 277.3 17.0 Fears that the dairy Industry of the program will be in a position The record-breaking total repre U. 8. National Bank Building Wm. R. Coppock . .... 112 5.375.8 2,378.5 50.039 256.5 27.2 would be over-crowded from expan to start the actual work with grow sented a gain of 13,323 pounds, or Practice in State A Federal Courte F. A. Baker ................ 229 123.034 6.564.8 6,558.6 345.4 19 3 sion caused by the increase in grass ers. more than six per cent, over Ore Pendleton, Ore. 7,083.1 Edna Mulkins 83 50.519 2,343.1 329.5 12.6 and legume crops, may or may not I Work sheets are to he obtained gon’s 1935 air mail volume. Of the 6,832.5 L. W. Owens ...___ .... 213 120,935 5,599.7 315.4 18.9 ; materialize, said Teutsch. In the this year for every farm In the coun total. 197.470 pounds were dis 7.322.8 B B. Eastridge .... .... 175 106.255 4,411.4 303.3 17.6 south, where most of the effect was ty, regardless of whether coopera patched DR F. B BELT from Portland. 10.532 6,589.5 4,429.9 305.5 96,367 Frank Seeliger ..... ... 171 12.7 ; thought likely to be felt already, a tion with the program is contempla pounds from Pendleton and 21,327 PHYSICIAN A SURGEON 5,949.5 9,845.0 309.5 H. J. Reid 382 189,215 16.8 great volume of increase could be ted. After the work sheets are in. pounds from Medford, as the three Office Hours: Other 6,035.2 10:30 to 12: 30 A M. Hours by 2,345.5 86 45,045 320.1 E. L. Jackson 13.9 absorbed locally through raising the | soil depleting and soil conserving points In Oregon at which air mail 2 to 5 P.M, Appointment 6.682.9 3,568.8 315.4 75.603 N. G. Robertson ..... .... 136 17.4 present low standards of living. , bases and a productivity Index will planes stop. Rea. 712 — PHONE — Office 733 9,650.0 15,141.4 335.3 C. A. Lynch ........ ... 542 435.910 15 9 Furthermore, any strengthening of he worked out for each farm. From Still further gains in the speed of 6,824.7 3,048.6 377.2 55.175 97 17 4 I the general agricultural price level, these the local committeemen will air mall service, plus added schedules L. C. Dyer 7,119.3 3,742.1 360 6 125 69.221 18.6 ! practically always works to the be able to work out a tentative out- and a continued growth of the na W. J. WARNER 7.799 0 44,539 1,523.2 257.6 78 21 8 general benefit of all agricultural nne of possible returns from partici- Don's vast airway network are ex J. A Reeves 5,389.8 33.618 1,513.2 240.4 17.5 industries, he pointed out. A. W. Turnblad ..... .... 75 pation, and from this each indivi- pected to contribute to even larger Attorn ey-at-Law The Oregon program for this year dual farmer will be able to deter air mail loads in 1937, Postmaster The average price received per I The average feed coat per pound I will be of more benefit to dairymen Hermiston - Oregon pound of butterfat was 34.1 cents, of butterfat produced was 17.2 cents. I than was the case last year, he pre- mine whether or not he wishes to DeMose said. cooperate under the program. There has been a noticeable in DAIRYMEN WILL MEET IN PORTLAND SPREAD OF 16.9 CENTS BETWEEN BUTTERFAT PRODUCTION (OST AND MARKET PRICE Radio Louie AUCTIONEER NEW AAA PROGRAM READY FOR WORK RAILROAD MAN RETIRES AT 80 9 gds”stg222 33 2288. DAIRYMEN STUDY FUTURE OF AAA JF H 34 • 2 - 3 3 INCREASE IN AIR MAIL IS GREAT Dr. A. C. Willcutt