T H U R S D A Y , M A Y 5, 1938.
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
Mr. and Mrs. B lackstone and aon
of H erm iston called a t th e E. B
W a tte n b u rg e r home T uesday even
ing.
Mr. an d Mrs E m ery Cox and
fam ily w ere b irth d a y d in n e r guests
a t th e H. E. Y oung home.
Mr. and Mrs. R obert S m ith of I r
rigon, Miss D ora E. Moore an d Rus
sel Moore sp en t S unday fish in g and
picn ick in g a t th e head of little But
te r Creek.
Mrs. A. E. W a tte n b u rg e r is spend
ing tw o weeks w ith her d au g h ter,
Mrs. Reid Buseick of Long Creek.
Mr. a n d Mrs. F ra n k H elm s and
fam ily were b irth d a y d in n e r guests
a t the Joe Foley home Sunday. The
occasion was Mrs. Foley’s b irth d ay .
Mrs. Floyd Van O rsdall an d Mrs.
E. B. W a tte n b u rg e r visited
Mrs.
Ja sp er Myers Sunday.
Mr. a n d Mrs. M arion F in ch and
Mr. and Mrs. B arton E. C lark were
d in n e r guests a t th e E dw in H ughes
home Monday evening.
H ugh C u rrin , Sr., and son Hugh
J r. of Lena were callers a t P in e Ci
ty Sunday.
There’s no long, tedious efforts
of Hair Dressing for the star of
"Star in My Kitchen”
for she enjoys the advantages of a
P e rm a n e n t W a v e
Come in and let us show you the new spring
styles in hair dressing . . . . and deposit your
free cooking school coupon— Grand Prize:
Rilling Permanent at Ruby’s Beauty Shop, $5.
R uby’s B eauty Shop
Phone 711
*
PINE CITY
♦
By Mrs. B ernice W a tte n b u rg e r
Mrs. Jo h n H arrison and son
J o h n n y spent the week end w ith
h er sister, Mrs. George C urrin.
People from P ine City a tte n d in g
th show of “ H appy L an d in g ” in
H erm iston Sunday were Mr. and
Mrs. Clayton Ayers and fam ily, Mr.
and Mrs. M arion P inch and fam ily,
a n d Mr. and Mrs. John H ealy and
fam ily.
V isitors and dinner guests a t the
E. B. W a tte n b u rg e r home Sunday
w ere Mr. and Mrs. E m ery Cox and
fam ily of H erm iston. E arl W a tte n
b u rg er of Pasco and Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd V an O rsdall of P endleton,
and
Mrs. R obert McGreer and
d a u g h te r Shirley.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Daly and daugh
BANANA T K A BREAD
te r K athleen and son C harles were
194 cups sifted Pillsbury*« B ert
P endleton callers S aturday.
Flour
Mrs. Ollie N eill was employed a t
94 teaspoon soda
th e O’Brien home d u rin g shearing.
194 teaspoons cream of ta rta r
94 teaspoon salt
Russel Moore called a t the E. B.
% cup Spry
W a tte n b u rg e r home Tuesday even
94 cup sugar
ing.
2 eggs, well beaten
R alph N eill spent th e week end
1 cup mashed banana (3 to >
bananas)
a t th e sta te C h ristian E ndeavor con
S ift the flour, soda, cream ol ta rta r
vention a t Oregon City as a dele
and salt together 3 times. Rub the
g ate from th e H erm iston Union shortening to a cream y consistency
church society.
w ith the bach or u spoon S tli the
ADOPTED AS FATHER
BY INDIAN PRIEST
Scientist Cures Stom ach
Ache; Wins Gratitude.
Evanston, 111.—Although he is
only thirty-one years old, Dr. Wil
lard Z. Park, of the department of
sociology and anthropology at
Northwestern university, is the
adopted father ot a forty-five-year
old Colombian Indian priest.
Dr. Park spent last summer on a
reconnaissance expedition among
the primitive Kagaba villages in the
Santa Marta mountains in northern
Colombia, laying the groundwork
for a year of intensive study of the
social, political and economic or
ganization of the Kagaba. His trip
was sponsored and financed by
the social science research council
of the university.
While in the Santa Marta moun
tains, the anthropologist, visited
Mocotama, a sacred place, where
only priests of the Kagaba are al
lowed to live. Arriving on mule-
back, Dr. Park discovered one of
the high priests in great agony with
stomach ache after having eaten too
much raw plantain, a native food of
the banana family.
PAGE THREW
Hermiston Mercantile Cooperative
FRIDAY - SATURDAY - MONDAY
PURE CANE SUGAR
$ 5 -2 5
Per Sack till May ^ th .
BORAX SOAP CHIPS ....................
SUN BRITE............................................. 3 for
Co-op B room s
4.Tie
9vc
25c
HALEY’S MEAT L O A F................. 7 oz. tins J 0 c
STRING BEANS, Ray croft B ran d ................... q c
STUFFED OLIVES ................... large bottle 2 < c
SILK TISSU E......................................... 6 for 2 ? c
CRACKERS..................................... 2 lb. box 2 3 c
KRAFT DINNER, a delicious m e a l............... 1SC
CORN FLAKES, A lbers................................... gc
Kraft’s Assorted Cheese -Fresh Supply
— SATURDAY ONLY —
Fresh Country Sausage
Lb. 16c
Priest Is Grateful.
PHONE 401
The ranking priest of Mocotama
had already tried several times to
effect a cure for his ailing colleague,
with no success.
The Northwestern university an
thropologist was prepared to meet
the situation. He offered the long-
INCOME FROM FR U ITS AND VE G E TA B LES
suffering priest a good stiff dose of
RELATED TO INCOME OF INDUSTRIAL WORKERS
castor oil.
PERCENT
1 9 2 4 - 2 9 * 100
So grateful was the relieved priest
120
The M artin Sw artz sh e arin g crew s u g a r a few tablespoons al a tim e,
that he asked for the privilege of
Into the Spry and '-ontloue s tirrin g
a re a t the Boylen ran ch for a week. a fte i each addition u ntil light and adopting Dr. Park into his family.
Mrs. C harles H. W ern er of H epp fluffy Add eggs ami beat w ell Add “But,” he explained in Spanish, “I
100
ner is v isitin g a t th e Jim Daly home flout m ixture, a lte rn a te ly w ith banana, cannot adopt you as my son, since
a
sm
all
amount
al
a
tim
e.
Deal
a
fte
r
we can only adopt as son those
w here h er husband is employed.
each addition u ntil smooth Pout Into
You have
Mr. and Mrs. C h arley Myers of a w ell greased loaf pan and bake In a whom we can teach.
C alifornia visited
a t th e Ja sp er m oderate oven (35,1” F I about I hour taught me. Therefore I will adopt
you as father.”
Myers and W. D. Neill home last • or u ntil bread Is done Makes I loaf,
The priest, whose adopted father
about
R’4
>
»
I
U
s
:i
Inches
week.
he is now, will be a valuable friend,
Dr. Park explained, when he re
turns to Colombia for intensive field
work among the Kagaba. The
priest has already prepared a house
for Dr. and Mrs. Park to live in,
and his wife is hard at work sew
ing richly-patterned bags which will
Delicious f o r picnics and fo r serving w ith fro sty drinks
1924
1926
1928
19,0
1934
I# i 6 '2 7 *
be presented to the anthropologist.
Treacherous Going.
t<S ^ er’ home-baked cookies
Dr. Park’s expedition last sum
Stake a n it w ith everyone. In «ran-
mer was made for the purpose of
,eaPQclally, they are a grand
F ig u res on to ta l farm income in
addition to the picnic lunch. They
establishing contacts in the villages, Oregon and in d u stria l w orkers’ in ers Is show n in th e accom panying
ch art. The income of in d u stria l
y o .J” 8* the thing to serve w ith
and
beginning
an
intensive
historic
frosty drinks, too — a t afternoon
al study of the area. Most of the come in th e U nited S tates show re w orkers is th u s show n to be a p r e t
° r . on a hot evening. W ith
Kagaba villages are thousands of m arkable sim ila rity In tren d s over ty fair b arom eter of probable gross
Tt’esh fru it or frozen desserts, they
solve the dessert problem easily.
feet above sea level and can be a period of years, according to d a ta farm income from f ru it and v eg eta
fall, children love them
reached only by pack train through published by th e O.S.C. extension bles. M oderate d ev iatio n s fin th e
m th eir lunch boxes.
narrow mountain passes and across service. The rela tio n sh ip is not so tren d in income of th e tw o groups
swift, treacherous rivers.
close In respect to farm income
Archeological remains along the from some com m odities as for o th of producers are usually associated
w ith v aria tio n s in th e supply of th e
northern coast of Colombia have
Stamp Cookies into Thin Rounds
suggested that before the Spanish ers, however. C onsum er dem and and com m odities, changes in foreign de
conquest in the Sixteenth century, prices for ce rtain item s like m eats, m and for export products, and o th
between. Let stand a few minutes.
a complex, highly organized civili b u tte r, ,and fru its and vegetables, er special factors.
Then press into shape w ith the
bottom of a glass covered w ith a
zation existed there. The ancient tend to follow the fo rtu n es of in d u s
The period 1924 to 1929 was a
damp cloth. O ccasionally dip glass thoroughly.
people possessing this culture are tria l w orkers i:i a g re a te r degree relativ
in w ater and pat towel to remove
ely stab le period on both
Sift
flour
with
known
from
early
Spanish
docu
excess moisture. No tedious rolling!
th an dem and an d price for some farm incom e and in d u stria l w o rk e rs’
ments
as
the
Tairona.
It
is
believed
N o messy cutting! And the last to creamed m lx t _
m ilk, m ixing w e ll.__
cookies in the batch don't get too
that the Kagaba people, who live o th e r com m odities like w heat an d income, b u t both took a heavy ta il
fr o m added f lo u r a n d e x tr a h a n baking sheets f r o m __
further
inland in the mountains, in
spin from 1930 to 1932, th en rose
press
through
a
pastry
dling! This is so much simpler than
■Inst Drop Dough on Baking Sheet the
habited the area between the Tai potatoes for w hich dem and is less to g e th er u n til 1937. Extenolon s e r
old method th at you can fill stand a few minutes, t h e n ___
stamping
w
ith
a
glass
covered
your cookie Jar w ith tes ter, tempt“
rona civilization on the coast and elastic” and prices rea ct largely to vice rep o rts show a sh a rp decline
a damp d oth . Bake In m
. ,® u t ,who wants to spend time In g cookies in no time!
another high civilization along the th e size of th e supply, as well as be d u rin g th e 1937-38 m a rk e tin g se a
hot
oven
(875*7.)
13
to
15
m
in
u
te
*
i
tediously rolling out cookies these
Here’s a wonderful recipe for old-
range of the Andes mountains, even
h o t summer days? I t also takes skill fashioned cookies. They are called_ This recipe makes 8 doaen.
ing affected
som ew hat
by
th e son In both fru it and vegetable p ri
baked cookies cool slightly an
before the Spanish invasion.
“ d Patience to roil and cut the
ces and in d u stria l w o rk ers’ Income
Ing
sheets,
then
remove
w
ith
stre n g th of dem and.
The
purpose
of
Dr.
Park’s
field
soft short” batter so essential to Aunt Jane’s Sugar Cookies
ula to w ire rack to finish «nr— --
good cookies. T hat is w hy women 1 cup Spry
work in northern Colombia is to
l egg. well beaten Store in a covered container.
T he gwneral rela tio n sh ip betw een
are enthusiastically welcoming this 1 teaspoon salt
6 cups sifted flour
study some of the relationships be
easier way to make better cookies. 1 teaspoon vanilla 4 teaspoons baking
Y o u r fam ily w ill love these rich,
th
e
Income of fru it an d vegetable
CLASSIFIED ADS
tween the primitive Kagaba and
crisp, tender cookies! Notice how
T ry this new method once and X teaspoon soda
powder
the two ancient civilizations, one to producers In th e U nited S tates an d
fine-flavored they are. A purer, all-
you’ll never go back to the old way. 2 cups sugar
1 cup milk
BRING RESULTS
I t ’s so simple, too. Just drop cookie
the north and the other to the south. the income of th e In d u strial w ork-
Combine Spry, salt, vanilla and vegetable shortening like Spry does
An Easier, Better Way to Make Cookies
dough from a spoon or pastry bag soda. A d d su g ar g ra d u a lly and
on the baking sheet, leaving space cream well. Notice bow m o n th ly
not disguise the delicate flavor of;
other Ingredients—it eaArmoea their,
goodness!
Mor-Tone Sound Service
“Your Frigidaire Dealer”
Cordially invites you to attend the Herald MOTION PICTURE COOKING
SCHOOL, “Star in MY KITCHEN/’ at the Oasis theatre May 9 -10 at 2 p.m.
-, —e«- mg/M/urs
REFRIGERATOR AND RANGE SENSATIONSI
FRIGIDAIRE 17WCT « it ir - msir
Sacramento, Calif. — Now that
wires flash messages across the na
tion in a few seconds, a telegraph
company has decided it has no more
use for the historic Pony Express
terminal here. It has offered the
building to the city of Sacramento
as a landmark and museum.
Stn/t all 4 urag — oryou anty not utvt at
i
r toby.
Frigidaire Electric Range
»¿vantage. . . sacrifices none!
H igh speed, low cost, sure results-com-
bined as never before! Come in. See this
marvelous new cooking sensation!
Refrigerator
AS LOW AS .
Range
-AS LOW AS .
$1195°
M an Take* Frize for
Being Absent-Minded
$13450
Mor-Tone Sound Service
P H O N E ,«
_
_ A « i . r n ,,„ T H e .U ._
_
All appliances sold at Portland regular and sale prices.
TERMS as low as the lowest.
Vancouver, B. C.—With further
development of the medicinal quali
ties of sharks’ liver oil, a renewed
interest has been created in shark
fishing on the Pacific coast.
Experiments to ascertain definite
ly the commercial possibilities of
this industry on the coast have been
conducted by a local fishing firm. A
shark fishery was operated here
several years ago, and fish were
caught for their leather and ferti
lizer qualities.
Sharks brought here weighed as
much as two tons and measured
from 35 to 50 feet in length. They
are comparatively gentle, fishermen
said, and reside in the depths, usu
ally burrowing for food in the silt
and mud of the bottom 100 to 150
fathoms deep.
Pony Express Terminal
Offered City as Museum
—cut» current c o m deepest ever! Saves
more on food • • . ice . . . upkeep, to o l
Cotnt
Shark Fishing Revived
by Medicinal Demands
Clay Center, Kan.—The preach
er wasn’t particularly talking
about fire and brimstone at the
time, but there must have been
some connection with it in the
sermon. In one of the more pop
ular churches here the other day
one of the men members dropped
his package of matches into the
collection plate instead of his
“collection envelope.” He says
his face has been red before, but
he never has been quite so ab
sent-minded.
E le c t r ic it y
and Electrical Appliances
are important factor* in making your home Modern!
Brides of Today and
Brides of Yesterday
. . . . . are learning to take advantage of electricity
in their homes. They use it freely in cooking, clean
ing, refrigeration, better lighting and for numerous
appliances that take the drudgery out of housekeep
ing.
Women and Housewives
. . . . can point with pride to the source of their elec
tric power and light supply and the record of un
broken service is unparalleled in Umatilla county.
The Hermiston Light & Power Company
urges you to attend the FREE Talking
Motion Picture Cooking School to be
shown at the Oasis Theatre Monday and
Tuesday, May 9th and 10th.
AS YOU WILL SEE AT THE COOKING SCHOOL
—ELECTRICITY DOES NOT CO ST___ IT
PAYS, AND ELIMINATES DRUDGERY.
Modernize with Electricity
Hermiston Light & 'Power Co.