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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1937)
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1937 FARM CO OPERATIVE DIVISION | WANT ADS ASESSAGE DAIRY HERD IMPROVEMENT AGE THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON. OREGON TO EVERY MEMBER. CANNING SCHEDULE i — FIVE —— FIRST CHOICE! FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR LIVE- stock—Model A Panel Ford, '31 modal; P. F. Rohr, Pendleton, Ore., I or Chas. Clark, Hermiston. 36-3tp Izóla Jensen, recreation specialist, and Miss Joan Patterson, house fur nishings specialist. The program in brief is listed below: 10:45 Registration, Exhibits and Hobbies. 11:15 "Family Fun.” 12:10 Election of County commit tee members. 12:30 Tour of Civic Center Build ings. 1:00 Luncheon. 2:15 Special Music. 2:30 "Wallpaper the Imitator". Luncheon will be served In the cafeteria of the Junior High school for 35c a plate. A nursery for the care of children will be in session where mothers may leave their children while they attend the Homemakers Day activities. Lunch eon will be provided for the child ren at the nursery for 15c. Members of the Umatilla county home extension committee who are in charge of the entire program are: Mrs. L. W. Owen, Pendleton; Mrs. L. A. McClintock, Pendleton; Mrs. Milton Carter, Pendleton: Mrs. J. M. Richards, Stanfield; Mrs. W. A. Hineline, Hermiston; Mrs. C. E. Fisk, Milton; and Mrs. E. J. Chas tain, Freewater. Offices of three members of the committee expire this year. The nominating commit tee will report and an election take place during the morning program. 2-ROOM APARTMENT FOR RENT We will can asparagus every day at Carter's Apartment, Hermis next week. Other canning done by ton, 37-3tc special arrangement with the man FOR SALE—BROWN SWISS BULL, The Umatilla-Morrow Dairy Herd ager. 2 years old, L. A. Thompson, 3* Improvement association has just Hermiston Co-op. Cannery. miles east of Stanfield. 36-3tp completed the fourth month of the 1937 year. There are 25 standard WANTED— SURGE MILKING MA- members in the association at the chine. H. E. Hanby, Hermiston. present time, with 318 cows tested Oregon. 37-ltp during the month, averaging a pro WANTED — A COAL BURNING The Farm Bureau Auxiliary will duction of 560.3 pounds milk and brooder for 100 turks. Write Geo hold its regular meeting Friday, 27.0 pounds butterfat. Currin, Echo, Ore. 36-3tc High herd honors in the 20 or May 7th, at the club house. There more cow class for the month of was a misunderstanding about this NEW PART FOR TRACTOR— LOST April goes to H. L. Payne of Her meeting because there were three from truck passing M. C. Baragar miston. His herd of 24 grade Jerseys Fridays between the last regular farm northeast of Hermiston, Fri day. April 30. Part may be had by averaged 577.8 pounds milk and meeting and the May 7th meeting, calling at Herald office and paying 30.0 pounds butterfat. High herd but it will be held for those who for this ad. Was found in corrugai- I honors in the 12 to 20 cow class wish to attend. ed box. The regular meetings are the goes to F. A. Baker of Stanfield. FOX FEED HORSES — WANTED. His herd of 18 grade'and registered first and third Friday of each month Phone 254. Echo. or write A. Jerseys averaged 696.9 pounds milk and anyone is welcome to attend Hackbarth, Echo, Ore., and I will Mrs. Henry Hooker, Mrs. Alice Wells and 32.7 pounds butterfat. call on you. 42-pd. and Mrs. E. C. Hughes will act as Herd under 12 cows with high WANTED — A USED FRUIT AND hostesses for the meeting Friday. honors go to L. C. Dyer of Hermis vegetable hand press. Call at Her A QUART ton. His herd of 6 registered Ter- ald office. 37-3tp sey cows averaged 618.0 pounds In less than a y »ar-Tint choice above FOR SALE—A LADIES' DIAMOND milk and 33.9 pounds butterfat. ring. Inquire at Herald office. High herd honors for the 4 months 35-3tp in the over 20 cow class goes to C. Wire worms are considered to be COAL BROODER STOVE FOR SALE A NEW STANDARD OIL FOR NEW CARS A. Lynch, Hermiston. His herd of the worst pests of American agricul Mrs. Gretchen Purdy, Hermiston, 44 registered Holstein cows averag ture. There are several different Oregon. 37-3tc ed 757.6 pounds milk and 27.4 kinds that are especially injurious Land Sale Notice. Get Your Lumber, Cement FOR SALE — 2 SETS GOOD HAR- pounds butterfat. to crops grown in the irrigated dist ness; Collars; one Big-6 Mowing NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that and Nails at In the 12 to 20 cow class F. A. ricts of the Pacific Northwest. Machine, good shape. G. G. Smith. the undersigned, Sheriff of Umatil Wholesale Prices Baker of Stanfield still holds high Stanfield, Ore. 35-3tc Intensive study of the life history la County, Oregon, by virtue of an honors. His herd of 18 grade and of wireworms and their behavior in by Ordering from • Federal Credit Union. TOMATO PLANTS FOR SALE AT order duly made and entered here registered Jerseys averaged 621.1 the soil have resulted in the recom J. C. HOSKINS, Stanfield, Ore. Mrs. Geo. Briggs home. B. S. in by the County Court of Umatilla The annual meeting of the Fed pounds milk and 30.4 pounds but mendation of several measures for eral Credit Union will be held In the Kingsley, Hermiston. 35-tfc Phone 28F4 County, Oregon, on the 5th day of terfat. their control. Two of these make office of Assistant County Agent Jay PASTURE FOR RENT AT McCOMAS April, 1937, will, on the 8th day of The W. R. Coppock herd of Adams use of chemicals—carbon disulphide T. Pierson, Monday, May 10th, at Island. See Ben Fix or inquire May, 1937, at the hour of ten which time election of officers and received high honors in the 12 cow and crude napthalene— which act committeemen will be held and fu at Island. 35-3tp o'clock in the forenoon, sell to the W. L. Morgan, D. M. D. and under class. This herd register as fumigants to kill the wireworms ture plans discussed. LIFE COMPANIONS — OUR DIGNI- highest bidder for cash in hand, at — • = ------- General Dentistry end and grade Guernseys averaged in the soil, especially on smaller fled method assures happiness. No the front door of the Umatilla Coun Co-operative Council Meeting. X-Ray and Diagnosis 639.9 pounds milk and 29.2 pounds acreages or high priced crops. The names published. Write for particu ty Court House, Pendleton, Oregon, butterfat. The annual meeting of the Co- lars. Eureka Club, 1233 SW Hall, other control measures are based on Bank Bldg. Phone 9-3 subject to a minimum price of $40.- Residence Phone 25-J High cow for the month of April cultural methods, which would obvi operative Council of Hermiston will Portland, Oregon. 35-3tp 00 therefor, to be paid in cash, at Sunday and Evenings by was owned by Dell Christley of Her ate the expense of chemicals and be held in the assistant county the time of sale, the following de Appointment miston; a six-year-old grade Jeresy consequently be of more practical agent’s office. May 7, 8:00 p. m. scribed parcel of land, heretofore by Call for Warrants. produced 117 6 pounds milk and use to the average farmer with a This is a very important meeting School District No. 26-51 in Mor Umatilla County, Oregon, acquired and each councilman should be pre row and Umatilla counties, State of 70.5 pounds butterfat. Second high larger acreage. for delinquent taxes, to-wit: These cultural methods are based pared to discuss problems effecting Oregon, hereby call warrants Num butterfat cow was a registered Hol SW* of SW* Section 23, Town ber 230 to 247 inclusive, issues of FARMERS AUTOMOBILE stein owned by C. A. Lynch of Her on the fact that great numbers of his organization. New officers will 1935 payment. Payment will be ship 5, North Range 29, EWM., Inter-INSURANCE Exchange miston, producing 1695 pounds milk wireworms can be killed by produc be elected at this meeting. made at the First National Bank of Umatilla County, Oregon. Pendleton, Pendleton, Oregon. In C. A. JACKMAN, Local Agent and 61.0 pounds butterfat. Another ing either an excess or a deficiency R. E. GOAD. Sheriff Soil Conservation Notice. terest ceases April 33, 1937. All Kinde of Auto and Truck 6-year-old owned by L. W. Owens of of moisture in the soil during the of Umatilla County. Insurance All farmers who signed up on the MRS. BERNICE WATTENBURGER, Adams produced 972 pounds milk summer season; that is, by flooding (April 8-May 6) District Clerk. Hermiston - - Oregon or by drying out the soil containing Agricultural Conservation program | and 60.2 pounds butterfat. for 1936, having soil conserving | the wireworms. Since the majority Bob Townsend. tester, stressed crops which were winter killed or the practice of feeding high produc of wireworms are to be found in the destroyed by drought for the period top foot of soil during the entire ing cows a little additional grain year, there are several cultural prac beginning July 1st, should list the during/ summer months i norder that herwin illiams tices that will help to leessen their number of acres with the assistant COVER they may go into the winter In bet numbers or reduce their damage to county agent on or before May 1st. Ies. ter flesh, which means that thev Forms for this purpose are in the A. W. BEHRMAN a great extent. will produce more pounds of milk WATCHMAKER The Farm Bureau Co-operative office of assistant county agent for and butterfat and return to their HERMISTON OREGON has this on hand and is recommend- your convenience. owner more profit above feed cost. ins its use highly. It is less expen sive for application than carbon $2,840,000 BUSINESS MARKS disulphide, although both will be CO-OP WHOIESALI S COTI YEAR stocked this summer. ELIMINATED Plowing of fields in the hot sum FRANCE FOR PARTICULARS SEE SUPERIOR, WIs. — Central Co- mer months after early crops have Reflecting the political and eco- operative Wholesale, estadiished in been removed also helps to kill the i nomiC history of France, a nation of 1917 with a capital of $15.50, com pupal stage of the wireworm. This small shopkeepers and peasant pro- pleted its 20th year of operation is a particularly delicate stage when prietors who take their political with a net worth of $200,000 and a the wireworms are changing to doctrines seriously, the French co- cooperative business which totaled beetles in the soil. Plowing to a operative movement has been a suc $2,840,000 in 1936, according to depth of nine inches around the cession of reverses and of growth. DR. A E MARBLE the report of H. V. Nurmi, general first of August and allowing the Today consumer cooperatives in CHIROPRACTOR manager of the co-op wholesale to dry lumpy soil to lie undisturbed clude more than two and one-half Office: 2 blocks east of post office cooperative representatives meeting for a few weeks will cut down ma million members and affect almost Office Hours: 8 to 12 - 1:30 to • terially the numbers of beetles that a fourth of the population, doing here April 12 and 13. Phone 481 — •— Hermiston, Ore Three hundred delegates from 100 might emerge and lay eggs the fol $233,000,000 in retail business in consumers cooperatives in the Lake lowing spring. 1934. It is estimated that the co The relation of crop rotations to operatives handle 12 per cent of Superior district crowded the Work Hermiston Post No. 37 ers Hall for the 20th annual meet wireworms numbers and damage has the foodstuffs in France but their Meets first and third ing of the cooperative and voted been studied now over a period of influence on prices and trade prac-, Thursday. Legion Auxil- measures designed to strengthen six seasons. It has been found that tices is local and inconsiderable, meets second and fourth Thursday. and extend the activities of the co- red clover and sweet clover have a the Cooperative Commission found. operative. In order to build a great tendency to increase wireworm num Except for bakeries and shoe facto Legion Hall. - er inventory of goods the delegates bers materillly after 1 or 2 years. ries the movement has done little approved the recommendation of the Just why this Is so is not fully un in production. Cutting the high re board to place $12,000 of last year's derstood, but if wireworms are tail spread rather than meeting the V. R. “Bob” RUNNION savings in a reserve fund and to re known to be present it is not ad threat of monopoly has been the AUCTIONEER • 't's a wonder hew just one hole in a screen attracts all turn the remainder of the $56,000 visable to grow these crops before aim of cooperative societies. FARM SALES AND LIVE STOCK manner of insects! But don't blame the screen, it's rust that net gain to affiliated cooperatives planting truck crops that might be During the post-war depression A SPECIALTY damaged severly by wireworms. Make Dates at My Expense breaks screen wires makes screen holes. Just one coat of in deferred rebates on purchases. years when cooperativees suffered as Heppner, Oregon Phone 452 At present the crude-napthalene did all business enterprise, the re The delegates instructed the board this screen enamel protects against rust. What’s more, it's of directors to establish a testing treatment, summer flooding, drying gional societies single organizations easy to apply won't clog the mesh makes screens bright laboratory to maintain and improve out the soil by growing grain or al with many stores closely knit for and attractive, and it prevenís rain from washing copper the quality of co-op brand goods; falfa. and summer plowing are the merchandising efficiency, have pro stains onto your house. endorsed the Wisconsin law provid best measures recommended for re ven the salvation of the movement. SPECIAL gry. One quart will covar the OSTEOPATHIC ing for teaching Consumers Coop ducing wireworm numbers under ‘Prior to the war the typical coop screens of an average Quart S-W Screen As, g " PHYSICIAN A SURGEON eration and Cooperative Marketing the various conditions in which they erative was a small store, patterned Enamel Black ... ft A 8-room home. in all public schools and urged oth are troublesome. after the petty neighborhood mer OSBORN APARTMENTS er states to follow Wisconsin’s lead; chant. At present there are 40 re appropriated $7,500 for educational gional societies with over 5000 work and empowered the board to stores In 1935. The Paris society spend more if business warrants; PETERSON & PETERSON operates a medical, surgical, and voted to establish a feed mill and dental clinic for Its members and ATTORNEYS AT LAW “All homemakers of Umatilla pays sickness, death, and maternity seed cleaning plant at Superior; U. 8. National Bank Building condemned fascism and voiced their county are invited to the second an benefits. Practice In State & Federal Courts S NER CVEN-WILL IA MS SHER WIN- WILLI A MS nual Homemaker's Day to be held allegiance to labor and peace. Pendleton, Ore. Failure of the Cooperative Bank Reaffirming Its past cordial pol May 11th in the Little Theatre of in 1934. the one black mark on the CLOSS ENAMEL icy toward organized labor, the co- the Vert Memorial building in Pen French cooperative record, was a For f. rilure, wocdwo.k, walls. Easy to apply. Dries overnight. DR F. B. BELT op wholesale meeting voted unani dleton.” says Miss Frances Clinton. severe blow to the movement as a 9 • c rying. Withstands wear and weather. PHYSICTAN * SURGEON Agent. The whole. Over-expansion of credit, in mously to "recognize the right of Home Demonstration Office Hours: Other QUART 604 employees to organize as they them purposes of Homemaker's Day are to cluding commercial (non-coopera 10:30 to 12:30 A M. Hours by SPECIAL 72* selves wee fit and to bargain collec summarize work done in the home tive) enterprises, is held responsi 2 to 5 P.M. Appointment tively through representatives of extension program during the past ble. The new banking society, com Res. 712 — PHONE — Office 733 year and to further develop some their own choosing, fully assured posed of all the consumer co-ops of that this entails no discrimination phases of home extension work France, bars all Investments In or on the part of organized labor again through talks given by specialists loans to non-cooperative enterpri w. J. WARNER st C.C.W. or the cooperative move from Oregon State college. There ses. A drastic reorganization with Attorney-at-Law ment as a whole." The wholesale will be exhibits of home extension in the movement followed failure of HERMISTON, OREGON has just signed an agreement with work and a hobby exhibit on dis the bank. A control society, fur Hermiston - Oregon the truckdrivers union (A.F. of L.) play. Specialists who will be here nishing audit and control service from Oregon State college are Miss PAINT HEADQUAR I ER S covering warehouse employees. (Continued -Next Week) F. B. AUXILIARY FRIDAY, MAY 7TH NAPTHALENE FOR WIREWORMS WATCH - CLOCK REPAIRING - W S COOPERATIVE PROGRESS ABROAD RADIO NOISE NO CHANCE OGETTNG N TEA, Radio Louie •.. those ScteenS aie _ Protected with S-W Screen Enamel Dr. A. C. Willcutt HOMEMAKER'S DAY TUESDAY, MAY 11 TH PORCH PAINT 2- Oregon Hardware & Implement Co