PAGE TWO
THE HERMISTON HERALD. HERMISTON. OREGON.
THURSDAY, JU N E 23, 1938
C tp tirrruuHtati iff raid
clim ate w here he will be free from
The an n u al school m eetin g was
hay fever and asthm a. T he com m ittee held in the school house Monday
Published every T hursday a t H erm is in charge included Mesdames M ar aftern o o n w ith ab o u t fifty in a t
ton, U m atilla County, Oregon, by tin Refvem, G. E. G reathouse, Mrs. tendance. The budget was adopted
P au lin e M. Stoop and A llred Q uirlng, H. McCormick and Mrs. W. G. W al as read. F ra n k Sloan was elected
lace.
d irecto r for th e one year term and
P ublishers.
Irvin Couch, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Shelton for th e th ree
Sintered as Second Class M atter Mrs. I. J. Couch, died T hursday year term . Miss Lenna W aid was
December, 1908, U m atilla County, m orning at St. A n thony’s hospital reelected clerk. N. D. Bard, presi
Oregon.
follow ing in ju rie s received W ednes dent of the board, presided d u rin g
day m orning w hen he was throw n the m eeting.
from a horse. He suffered head in
S ubscription R ates.
Mrs. Ed K enney and four ch ild
One Y ear ..................................... J2.00 ju rie s and did not reg ain conscious ren of Kellogg. Idaho, a re guests of
ness.
F
u
n
eral
arran
g
e
m
en
ts
had
not
Six M onths ................................... 1.00
her b ro th er and sister-in -law , Mr.
Three Months ...................................... 60 been made.
Mrs. Fred Shelton
for two
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. L o n th an were and
weeks.
called to Raym ond, W n., la st week
-, ___ M e m b e r_
Mr. and Mrs. A lvin T ate of E l
because of th e treath of an uncle.
They retu rn ed to th e ir home on the lensburg, W n., an d d a u g h te r C ath
OreqoiCNewspaper Publishers
erine spent F a th e r’s day a t the
project Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. F. S teinke took th e ir H ow ard T ate home east of town.
four-year-old son to W alla W alla
Miss Dorothy Shelton arriv ed F r i
W ednesday for tre a tm e n t for m as day from S an ta Rosa, Cal., w here
toid infection.
she has been a tte n d in g J u n io r Col
Mrs. F o rsy th e of P o rtlan d is a lege. She was accom panied by two
guest of her paren ts, Mr. an d Mrs. cousins. Bill and George Zim m ers Of
Ja ck Law rence.
Stockton, Cal., who will spend the
At th e reg u la r Ladies Aid m eet sum m er a t the Fred Shelton home.
ing T hursday aftern o o n , Mrs. Don
Sikes w as elected vice p resid en t to
C harles B renner of S eattle is m ak
tak e the place of Mrs. E. A. Hoosier ing his home w ith his uncle and
STANFIELD (S p e cia l)— T he Lad who has resigned. The o rg an iz a a u n t, Mr. and Mrs. P ercy May.
ies Aid sponsored a farew ell party tion presented a g ift to Mrs. U. S.
The public is invited to th e ch ild
Tuesday n ig h t in the church parlors Richardson who will soon move to
honoring Mr. and Mrs. E d g ar Hoos Redmond. Mrs. E. A. H oosier pre re n ’s day program of m usical n um
ier. Mrs. H. McCormick, presi sented a F a th e r’s day program of bers an d a play to be given in the
dent, had charg e of the program music and sh o rt talks. Those p a r P resb y terian church Sunday, Ju n e
w hich consisted of a sk it by M arie tic ip a tin g included Mrs. J. K. G rif 26, a t 8:00 P. M.
R hea and Neva H edrick; vocal and fith s, Mrs. L. Jo u n n a u lt, M argaret
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. W oodhouse
in stru m e n ta l m usical num bers by G riffith s, P a tty McAlister, Mrs. Don
Mesdames Don Sikes, H ans R yning, Sikes, E sth e r G riffith , Don Refvem and d au g h te r of B aker called on
M artin Refvem and H. McCormick; and Billy Penney. Mrs. W. G. W al S tanfield friends F rid ay w hile on
th e ir way to E ugene w here Mr.
the Misses M argaret G riffith s. M arie lace was hostess.
R hea,
Neva H edrick,
Josephine
F ra n k Sloan and V ernon W ald W oodhouse will a tte n d th e sum m er
Rhea and M arie Lane, and by Billy represented th e local Masonic lodge session a t the U. of O. Mr. Wood-
P enney and Don Refvem ; a reading a t the Grand Lodge session in P o rt house was form erly a m em ber of the
local high school faculty.
by Mrs. J. M. R ichards, and a good land la st week.
Billy H edrick, who Is em ployed
will ta lk by Rev. J. K. G riffith s to
Mrs. Jack Law rence and ch ild ren
w hich Mr. H oosier graciously re retu rn ed
T h u rsd ay
follow ing
a in P o rtlan d , made a brief visit e a r
sponded. A silver tea service and w eek’s visit a t Bend w ith Mrs. L aw ly th is week at th e home of her p a r
o th e r g ifts were presented th e hon ren ce’s dau g h ter. B etty w ill rem ain ents, Mr. and Mrs. H om er H edrick.
Mrs. W. C. Isom of Irrig o n w as a
orees.
Mr. and Mrs. H oosier will a t Bend to spend the sum m er w ith
business visito r in S tanfield T ues
leave Ju ly 1 to m ake th e ir home in her sister.
A shland, Ore. We a re indeed sorry
Yes, w e’ll ad m it the m ain topic day.
to have th e H oosiers leave as they of conversation in th is lo cality is
Mrs. V ernon W aid and
have been active in civic, social and th e U m atilla rapids p roject of which son Mr. Jim and
m y plan to go to Corvallis
church w ork. However, th e ir m any we catch glim pses each day ju st th is week w here Mrs. W aid will a t
frien d s hope th a t E d g ar m ay find a around the bend in the river.
tend sum m er school.
HOOSIERS MOVE
TO ASHLAND, ORE.
COOL
SUMMER TRAVEL
BY
BUS
★ No d u s t— no d ra fts . Cool, clean a ir
com pletely c la n g e d e v e ry 3 m in u te s .
HERMISTON DRUG CO.
Phon« 101
Main Street
U N IO N
P A C IF IC
STAGES
Rosella and Jim m ie Fuscaldo and
E lean o r Rodgers of P o rtlan d are
m aking an extended v isit a t th e
home of th e ir au n t Mrs. E lizabeth
Nudo.
x
Miss M arilla D unning, who heads
th e home economics d ep a rtm en t' of
th e Stockton, Cal., schools, arriv ed
Sunday and is spending a portion of
h er vacation a t th e N. D. Bard and
G. L. D unning homes.
The Roy Shopshire fam ily are
now liv in g in th e S tanfield hotel
w hich they plan to operate in the
n ear fu tu re.
Mr. and Mrs. B ert M artin of W al
la W alla were callers in Stanfield
T hursday.
E v erett Ezell, Tw in City cream
tru ck driver, who has been in a
Pasco hospital, is now at his home
here b u t is as yet unable to work.
S p o tlig h t Special!
Apricot Nectar R. « w. 7c
Wheat
Cereal “ S'
c
Rolled Oats Red and W hite
All Bran K ellogg’s
Sunspun
qt.
Mayonnaise
qt.
French Dressing « oz.
Peanut Butter 2 lbs.
Red & W hite - % LB.
Tea
20c
23c
21c
39c
45c
15c
39c
39c
RALSTON’S SHREDDED
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE Red and W hite
Red & W hite 2’s
GRAPEFRUIT
PANCAKE FLOUR R. & W. - 2*4’
BACON
lb.
Assorted Lunch Meat lb.
Ben Cree Cottage Cheese pt.
FLAKEWHITE
4 lbs.
10-12 - W hole
or H alf Slab
31c
29c
15c
57c
HERMISTON TRADING CO.
Fiee Delivery
Phone 341
Prompt, Courteous Service
A our Friendly Home Owned Store
t h e
red
& w h it e
The Sign of a Dependable Store
STO R ES
“ Ye have need of patience”
ANY persons are ready to ad
mit th at they have need of
patience. Some are earnestly
striving to cultivate it, and occasion
ally someone may feel th a t be has
m easurably succeeded in realizing
It. One engaged in any legitim ate
pursuit may exercise this quality in
the sense of perseverance or endur
ance in w orking tow ard some desired
end. But in oth er respects it enters
Into one’s attitu d e tow ard affliction,
provocation, or any evil, eith er as a
negative, passive endurance or else
as a positive spirit of fortitude,
meekness, and unconquerable tru st
in good. It was in the tru e r sense
th a t the w riter of th e epistle to the
Hebrews, afte r referrin g to the
“ great fight of afflictions” which
they had endured, said to the Chris
tian converts: “ Cast not away there
fore your confidence, which hath
great recompense of rew ard. F or ye
have need of patience, th a t, after ye
have done the will of God, ye might
receive the prom ise” (Hebrews 10:
32. 35, 36).
The world has witnessed many fine
examples of forebearance of one to
ward another, in view of an o th er’s
seeming faults, infirmities, or need
for com fort or care: examples of
courage necessary to face difficult
conditions with a calm expectation
of some desirable outcome, and of a
kindliness m aintained under vexa
tious stress. Indeed, in all such in
stances of discipline patience is
equivalent to an undaunted confi
dence in som ething higher and bet
te r than the troublesom e error. And
this shows th a t good is ever present,
and th a t it is in some measure
grasped and m anifested by right-
thinking persons.
Much greater, then, is the impetus
toward "p atien t continuance in well
doing” (Rom ans 2:7) when, through
C hristian Science, good is discerned
as divine Principle to be understood
and dem onstrated; when it is seen
th a t we need patience toward our
selves, as we seek in calm persever
ance to know the spiritual reality, so
th a t a fte r we “ have done the will of
God” we may "receive the promise.”
W hat is the will of God, and what
are the promises to be fulfilled, as
our thoughts are conformed to His
will? These are questions we need
to consider, th a t we may learn
w herein we “ have need of patience."
C ultivating a calm, steadfast charac
ter is praisew orthy; but gaining tru e
patience means more than this. It
M
means persevering in the effort to
understand God and man, so th a t in
all our common or unusual experi
ences we may express the tru th
which we know to be real, and thus
face all things not only with kindli
ness, but with power, the power of
reflected love, which heals discord
an t conditions. . . .
This view of patience as a quality
we need in working out our own
salvation from m aterial self and
sense, helps us to be truly forbear
ing tow ard others, for in striving, to
conform to divine Principle we more
clearly see as unreal the conditions
which tem pt us to impatience, dis
content. weariness, resentm ent. And
in healing our own thoughts we are
in that meacure bringing the healing
tru th to discordant conditions and to
all involved therein.
Our great need is to understand
God and man and faithfully apply
our understanding, looking to good
w it’., unconquerable hope and love.
This we m ust do; this alone help.-
us to overcome our difficulties. Mary
Baker Eddy says in Science anil
H ealth with Key to the Scriptures,
“The Divine Being must be reflected
by m an,— else man is not the image
and likeness of the patient, tender,
and true, the One ’altogether love
ly ;’ but to understand God Is the
work of eternity, and dem ands abso
lu te consecration of thought, energy,
and desire.”
We m ust not be im patient with
ourselves when we feel th at our foot
steps in knowing God are halting
and our progress slow. W’e m ust re
m em ber the perfect beauty of the
goal. And since we are w orking out
this great problem of being in asso
ciation with others in all m anner of
hum an affairs, we have need of pa
tience as kindliness of h eart which
fu rth e rs our own realization of good
and our own release from false be
lief, while it also extends the healing
influence of divine Love to all con
cerned and am eliorates the friction
of hum an will.
In his epistle Jam es speaks of the
husbandm an who "w alteth for the
precious fru it of the earth, and hath
long patience for It, until he receive
the early and la tte r r a in ;” and from
th is lesson he draw s the adm onition
“ Be ye also patient; stabllsh your
h earts for the coining of the Lord
draw eth n igh” (Jam es 5:7, 8). The
g reat purpose to know God and man
arig h t, to lay aside the false sense
of self, calls for the sublim e serenity
which is ever upborne by the assur
ance th a t w hatever is unlike God Is
being conquered. . . . — The Chrii-
tian Science Monitor.
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f only a minimum of quick assets
cannot give you 100% protection against
financial loss. CAPITAL STOCK COM
PANY FIRE INSURANCE is recognized
as the most dependable form of insurance because it
provides sound protection at a fixed known-in-advance
cost, because its pobcies are backed not only by legal
premium reserves but also by cash capital and surplus,
because it operates through authorized citizens of your own
community, Local Agents who are always available to
render prompt personal service.
A
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HERMISTON
F. B. SWAYZE. P resid en t
Member Federal Deposit Insurance-Corporation
<1
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES
{»IS The Universe, Including Man,
£ Evolved by Atomic F orce?”
was the subject of the Lesson-Ser
mon in all Churches of Christ,
Scientist, on Sunday, June 19.
The Golden Text was, "O ur help
is in the name of the Lord, who
made h e a v e n and ea rth ” (Ps.
124:8).
Among the citations which com
prised the Lesson-Sermon was the
f o llo w in g f r o m the B i b le :
“Through faith we u n d e r s t a n d
th at the worlds were framed by
the word of Cod, so th a t things
which are seen were not made of
things which do appear” (Heb
11:3).
The Lesson-Sermon also Includ
ed the following correlative pass
ages from the Christian Science
textbooks. S c ie n c e and H ealth
with Key to the Scriptures” by
Mary Baker Eddy: “ The notion of
a m aterial universe is utterly op-
pored to the theory of man as
evolved from Mind. Such funda
mental errors rend falsity into a!l
human doctrines and conclusions
and do not accord infinity to De
ity. . . . The tru e theory of the
universe, including man, is not in
m aterial history b ut in spiritual
development” (pp. 545, 547).
HERMISTON BAPTIST CHURCH
Theodore A. Leger, P astor.
T here is no hum an problem , how
ever vexing or in tric a te , th a t cannot
be solved, and solved rig h tly if the
solution is so u g h t In th e W ord of
God.
“Search th e S crip tu res.” Is
an in ju n ctio n w hich m ig h t w ell and
profitably be heeded by both in d i
viduals and governing bodies.
10:00 A. M., C hurch school.
11:00 A. M., M orning w orship
and serm on, “God’s A n tid o te.”
7:30 P. M., A lectu re on A frica
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
CHURCH.
A. T. K ingsbury, E ld er
Sabbath school a t 10:00 A. M.
Mrs. J. O. Gray, su p e rin ten d e n t.
P re ach ing service a t 1 1 :0 0 A. M..
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Colum bia School
11:00 A. M., Devotional service
and communion.
10:00 A. M. Bible school.
FULL GOSPEL MISSION
A. B. T u rn er, P asto r
Sunday school a t 10:00 A. M.
Mrs. H ow ard M ontgom ery, Supt.
Morning worship at 11:00 o’clock.
C hildren’s services a t th e p arso n
age a t 11:00, Mrs. T u rn e r in charge.
E vangelistic service in th e eve
n in g a t 7:45 P. M.
Bible Study F rid a y a t 7 :45 P. M.
4
METHODIST CHURCH
R. R. F in k b eln er. P asto r
Sunday school 10:00 A. M. J u n
ior church 11:00, and Biorning w or
ship at 11:00. E pw orth League a t
6:30 P. M. and evening praise a n d
preaching service a t 7:30 o’clock.
L adies’ Aid every firs t and th ir d
W ednesday.
Midweek song an d
preaching service on T h u rsd ay
at
7:30 P. M. Bible school S atu rd ay .
2:00 P. M.
Ju n io r
church
su p e rin te n d e n t,
Lois H utchison; L adies’ Aid presi
dent. Em m a F elthouse:
S unday
school su p erin ten d en t. Opal R ain
w ater; E p w o rth League p resid e n t,
Rebecca P ierson; Church pastor, R.
R. F inkbelner.
W e e k E n d Specials a t
BOYNTON & KELLEY
RITZ CRACKERS
22*
L arge P k g ......................
CRACKERS
EGG NOODLES
JQ ?
L arge Packages
“ Z ’’
PINEAPPLE
In Cel,°
29*
49*
9S*
ALL BRANDS
1 lh.....................
Our Special B rand
1 lb ...................................
HONEY
COFFEE
L ight A m ber
5 lb. c a n ..................
3
SALMON
15*
JELLO
All Six Delicious
Flavors
E ach ....
5*
TOMATOES
U tah
3 large cans ..................
27*
SALAD DRESSING
V alley's T able Queen
Q uart ..........................
SANDWICH SPREAD
Q uart .............
25*
27*
Diamond
PICNIC PLATES
In Packages
3 dozer, for .
25*
COARSE GRAHAM
10 'lbs. n et w eig h t
Bag ............... - ........
19<
69*
Broken Sliced
L arge Cans ............
Crushed
No. 10 tin s ............
Snow flake o r K rispies
W hite or G raham
2 lb. carto n s ...............
Columbia Red
Pound Cans ..............
HERMISTON UNION CHURCH
C. W arn er, P asto r.
Bible school 10:00 A. M.
W orship service 1 1:00 A. M.
7 :0 0 P. M., C h ristian E ndeavor.
8 :0 0 P. M., Church services.
C hoir p ractice will be held S a tu r
day evening a t 7 :30 o'clock, a t th e
church.
T h ere w ill be no S unday evening
service, b u t th e group w ill meet
w ith th e B aptist yen t i g people to '
hear a lectu re on A frica given by ,
Rev. Leger.
Midweek p ray er and Bible study.
W ednesday, 7:30 P. M.
L adies Aid each W ednesday 2:00
P. M.
M issionary m eeting, second W ed- I
tiesday of each m onth.
Bible school su p e rin ten d e n t Chas. I
|D u v a ll; P resid en t. C, E., C a th e rin e '
McMullen: P resid en t L adies Aid
Mrs. C. W a rn er; P resid en t M ission
ary Society, Mrs. C. R. Moore.
T
9
10 lb. can ....................
CHURCH NOTES
in general, and th e Belgian Congo
in p articu la r, w ill be given u n d er
the auspices of th e B.Y.P.U. an d
w ill tak e up th e tim e of th e u su a l
evening service.
W ednesday a t 8 :00 P. M., p ra y e r
m eeting hour.
39*
lbs.................................
29*
23*
67*
TOMATO JUICE
L arge 46 oz. cans
Each ......................
23*
Jello Freezing Mix
Assorted
3 cans
& it
Johnson’s Gio-Coat
P in t
coe
1
P1NT
2 FR E E !
- WE DELIVER ICE -
STRING BEANS
1 * Q
y e' w
Fresh Local
3 pounds
FRESH LOCAL PEAS
d pounds
.............
J9*
TEXAS TOMATOES*
Red and Firm
P ound ......................
1O<