THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1938.
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON. OREGON
PAGE TWÒ
G ran g e sp eak ers w ere in tro d u c e d by
Don Sherw ood,
W estlan d
G ran g e
P u b lish e d ev ery T h u rsd a y a t H erm is M aster, w ho gave a b rie f ad d ress of
to n , U m atilla C ounty, O regon, by w elcom e. F ra n k S eelig er a n d Floyd
P a u lin e M. Stoop an d A lfred Q u lrln g , L aird . P a s t M asters of th e W estlan d
P u b lish ers,
G ran g e, w ere also in tro d u ced .
E n te re d as Second Clasa M atter
T h e m u sical p o rtio n of th e p ro
D ecem ber, 1906, U m a tilla C ounty,
O regon.
______
____ g ra m w as fea tu re d by solos by M rs.
A lton K in g sb u ry , w ho w as accom
S u b scrip tio n R ates.
One Y ear ................................... - $2.00 panied a t th e p iano by G olda M um-
Six M onths ...................................
1.00 m a. H aro ld L aird sa n g to h is ow n
T h re e M onths ....... —.......................... 60 acco m p an im en t on th e g u ita r, an d
W an d a D u n n in g played a p ian o solo.
n
.M e m b e r—
Mrs. M a rg aret S eeliger. an d
Mrs.
O regon” Newspaper Publishers
P h illip P o w er e n te rta in e d
w ith a
s k it e n title d , “ And th e C ar S to p p ed .”
|J
Wrrtnistai. Tjrralii
J a y T. P ierso n , a s s is ta n t co u n ty
a g e n t, in tro d u c e d G race a n d F ra n k
B ensel w ho gave a d e m o n s tra tio n on
th e p ro p er m eth o d s of g ra d in g an d
c a n d lin g eggs. T h is w as a 4-H club
d e m o n s tra tio n , an d th e y o u n g ste rs
hope to co m pete fo r th e r ig h t to
d e m o n stra tio n
at
th e
More th a n 75 G ra n g e rs an d th e ir give th e ir
frien d s
a tte n d e d
th e
W estlan d W orld P o u ltry C ongress n e x t su m
G range booster n ig h t T h u rsd a y , Oc mer.
to b er 13, in th e Odd F ello w s h all,
G ran g e B o o ster n ig h ts a re held
an d enjoyed a p ro g ram a rra n g e d by
each y e a r by G ran g es
th ro u g h o u t
Mrs. J. D. C orliss, G ran g e le c tu re r.
th e c o u n try in com m em oration
of
T he p rin c ip a l sp e a k e r of th e ev en
th
e
fo
u
n
d
in
g
of
th
e
G
ran
g
e,
th
is
be
ing w as Dr. F. B. B elt, w ho gave a
w ell received ta lk on th e su b je c t o f in g th e 73 rd a n n iv e rsa ry of t h a t
diabetes.
ev en t.
O th ers w ho spoke b rie fly w ere Mr.
T h e n ex t re g u la r m e e tin g of th e
an d Mrs. C laude H anscom of P e n
W
estlan
d G ran g e w ill be O ctober
dleton, M aster an d
se c re ta ry , re
27.
A
s h o rt H allo w e’en p ro g ram
sp ectiv ely of th e U m a tilla Pom ona
G range, an d Roy P en n ey , P a s t M as h as been a rra n g e d by th e le c tu re r,
te r of th e S ta n fie ld G ran g e.
T he and m em bers a re u rg ed to a tte n d .
BOOSTER NIGHT
PROGRAM TOPS
Specials fo r Oct. 21, 22 & 24
2 lbs. 4 5 0
r n p P F F MART
UUIT l L
1 lb. 1 5 <
EARLY RISER
RED & WHITE MILK - t a ll.................. 4 for
KARO - Blue or Red No. 1 0 .............................
RED & WHITE FLAVOR JELL..........4 for ¿ 9 0
R & W CORN or GLOSS STARCH
3 for
RED & WHITE MAYONNAISE..........quart 4 5 0
RED & WHITE WAX PAPER ...........125 ft. J 9 0
RED & WHITE PUMPKIN - 2y2’s ................ J J0
STIDD’S TAMALES - l ’s .......................2 for J £ 0
3 for 25c
PARO DOG FOOD i
8-10 BACON - Whole or H a lf.................... lb. 2 9 0
FLAKEWHITE - Pure Veg, Shortening 4 lbs. 9*70
C abbagefor kraut
S w eet Spuds
$1.29
8 Lbs
Per crate
H E R M IS TO N T R A D IN G CO.
The
E S 5 0 C 3 ÎP 3 S tore
. . . a typewriter
you’ve never seen before
T H E B R AN D N E W
Agricultural Development
C olum bia School
1 1 :0 0 A. M., D evotional service
and com m union.
1 0 :0 0 A. M. B ible school.
From prehistoric times rudiments
of the science of agriculture—of cul
tivating the soil for the purpose of
obtaining food—have been known to
man. In ancient Egyptian tombs
sealed shut 6,000 years ago have
been found grains of a cultivated
type of wheat; upon the walls of
these tombs are portrayed date trees
and the Egyptian farmer afield with
crude plow and harrow. Early Chi
nese history indicates an advanced
agricultural system, notes a writer
in the Chicago Tribune. The Greeks
used fertilizers on their lands and
knew the value of allowing a field
to lie fallow. The early Roman
was adept at two arts—war and
farming. The first American col
onists learned agricultural methods
adapted to the new world from the
Indians, first farmers of America.
Throughout the history of coloniza
tion and expansion westward, be
hind the scouts and restless pioneers
always have come the hordes of
land-eager settlers, ready to con
vert the wilderness into farmland.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES
44f\O C T R IN E of A tonem ent” was
Jy subject of th e Lesson-Ser
mon In all C hurches of C hrist,
S cientist, on Sunday, O ctober 16.
The Golden T ext was, "God
h ath not appointed us to w rath,
b u t to obtain salvation by our
L ord Jesu s C hrist, who died for
us, th a t, w h eth er we w ake or
sleep, we should live to g eth er w ith
him ” (I The-. 5 :9 ,1 0 ).
A m ong the citations which com
prised th e L esson-Serm on was the
follow ing from th e Bible: ‘‘Be
loved, th in k it n o t stran g e con
cerning th e fiery tria l which is to
try you, as though some strange
th in g happened u n to you; E u t re
joice. inasm uch as ye a re p a rta k
e r of C hrist's sufferings; th a t,
when his glory shall be revealed,
ye may be glad also w ith exceeding
joy” (I P eter 4 :1 2 ,1 3 ).
The L esron-Serm on also Includ
ed the follow ing correlative pass
ages from the C hristian Science
textbook, “ S c ie n c e and H ealth
w ith K ey to th e S crip tu res” by
Mary B aker E ddy: “T he n a tu re of
C h ristian ity is peaceful and bless
ed, b u t in o rd er to e n te r Into the
kingdom , the an ch o r of hope m ust
be cast beyond th e veil of m a tte r
Into th e S hekinah Into which
Je su s has passed before us; and
th is advance beyond m a tte r m ust
come th ro u g h th e joys and tr i
um phs of the rig h teo u s as well as
th ro u g h th eir sorrow s and afflic
tio n s” (p .4 0 ).
Battleship Drenched With Blood
The deck of the Lawrence, Oliver
H. Perry’s ship in the battle of Lake
Erie, was so bloody that sand had
to be sprinkled on the wood so the
fighters still alive could stand.
Eighty-three men on the ship fell
from the bullet fire of the British
vessels. Surrounded by six enemy
ships, the Lawrence was battered
until it tipped to one side. Her rig
ging and spars were shattered and
her sails were down. When it looked
as though Perry must surrender, he
and his small brother and four sea
men dropped into a rowboat and
started under cover of gunsmoke for
the Niagara. Before they reached
the other ship, the British spotted
the little boat and began pounding
it with bullets. None of the men
was hit, but one bullet went through
the side of the rowboat, causing
a leak. To save the boat from filling
with water and sinking Perry took
off his coat and stuffed it into the
hole. The men reached the Niagara
safely.
No. 9281.
29.75
Sensational ligh twe ight
(8 lbs. IS os. in its all
steel e s se), . . standard
keyboard, >4 characters
. . . Swinging S hift and
back spacer—yat tucks
away in traveling bag
of desk drawer.
See i t a t th e
HERALD OFFICE
Reserve Dist. No. 12
R eport of Condition of
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF H ER M ISTO N
in th e S ta te of O regon, a t th e close
of business S ep tem b er 28, 1938.
♦
I
♦
VOTE 302 YES
I
|
—FOR AMENDMENT OF THE CONSTI- ; *
TUTION OF THE STATE OF OREGON ; ►
—ELIMINATING DOUBLE LIABILITY o
OF STOCKHOLDERS IN O R E G O N H
STATE-CHARTERED BANKS.
THIS R
WILL PLACE STATE-CHARTERED ;;
BANKS ON SAME FOOTING, IN RE- R
SPECT TO LIABILITY, AS NATIONAL R
:
BANKS. BOTH NOW AFFORD DEPOS- ; ’
ITORS PROTECTION OF FEDERAL DE- ; >
POSIT INSURANCE CORPORTION. . . H
I
•
<f>
<§>
o
1 ►
< ►
< ►
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HERMISTON
! I
< !
< >
F. B. SWAYZE, President
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
R ay S p ark s le ft la s t w eek to be
em ployed in th e CCC cam p a t H epp
ner.
Mrs. F ord of G aston, Ore., and
Mrs. B o u lw are of H e rm isto n w ere
over n ig h t g u ests of M rs. H arv ey
W a rn e r T uesday.
C lair C aldw ell and Bob S m ith le ft
fo r P o rtla n d th is w eek to be em
ployed in c o n stru c tio n of a house.
Mr. an d Mrs. H a rn e ss and Miss
H a rn e ss of W a sh in g to n a re v iistin g
a t th e hom e of th e ir b ro th e r here.
Mrs. Glen S n oderly an d ch ild re n
cam e from Id ah o to pay a v isit to
! ’
3 3
♦
< >
M rs. F red Doll.
A rlene D exter, sm all d a u g h te r of
Mr. and M rs. B ert D exter, s p ra in e d
h er arm sev erely th is w eek.
Mr. a n d Mrs. Ben McCoy m otored
to Im b ler fo r th e w eek end.
B ill G ray b eal, G lenn A ld rich a n d
p a rty le ft S u n d ay to go d eer h u n t
ing. T hey expect to sta y u n til th e
close of th e season.
Mrs. F ra n k B race, M rs. A lda G ray
beal, Mr. an d M rs. B e rt D exter, M r.
K n ig h te n an d son an d M r. and M rs.
W. C. Isom v isited in
H e rm isto n
S a tu rd a y .
(P u b lish e d In response to call m ade
by C o m p tro ller of th e C u rren cy , u n
der Sec. 5211, U.S. R evised S ta tu te s )
Size of Rain Drops
Drops of water formed in the at
mosphere by condensation of aque
ous vapor and falling rapidly by
virtue of their weight are known as
rain. Smaller, finer particles, fall
ing more slowly, are known as mist
or fog. Drops of rain one-fourth to
three-tenths of an inch in diameter
have been measured. The smallest
drops of rain measure one-twentieth
of an inch in diameter.
RESOURCES
L oans a n d d isco u n ts .... $173,905.64
O v e rd ra fts .......................
5.
U nited S ta te s Gov. secu
ritie s ow ned ................
45,500.00
O ther bonds, stocks, se
c u ritie s, e tc ..................
12,697.23
B a n k in g house .................
8,000.00
R eal e s ta te ow ned o th e r
th a n b a n k in g ho u se ..
3,312.93
R eserve
w ith
F e d e ra l
R eserve B ank ...........
30,902.09
E n g la n d ’s new M useum of P ra c
tic a l Geology opened
Ju ly
th ird , C ash a n d due from b a n k s 166,717.97
w hen th e B ritis h G eological S urvey
TOTAL .......................... $441,041.50
w as ju s t one h u n d re d y ears old.
L IA B ILITIES
T h e race horse is th e sw ifte st of D em and deposits ........... $224,971.53
o u r com m only k n o w n m am m als, the T im e d eposits ................... z 100,407.14
a n te lo p e second, an d th e g rey h o u n d P u b lic fu n d s o f sta te s,
co u n ties, e tc .................... 56,457.29
th ird , acco rd in g to E rn e s t T h om p
U. S. G ov ern m en t & pos
son Seton.
ta l sav in g s d ep o sits --
1,054.64
Due to b an k s In c lu d in g
❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖
❖ ❖
c a sh ie r's checks o u t
s ta n d in g ..........................
6,446.53
S ecured by pledge
of lo an s an d io r in
v e stm e n ts .................$ 8,836.52
FU LL G OSPEL MISSION
N ot
secu red
by
pledge of lo an s and
Irrig o n , Ore.
|or in v e stm e n ts .... 380,500.61
S u n d ay school. 1 0 :0 0 A. M.
M o rn in g serv ice, 1 1 :0 0 A. M.
T o ta l D eposits —. $389,337.13
C h ild re n ’s serv ice 1 1 :0 0 A. M.
C an ital sto ck p aid In .... 25,000.00
Com m on stock, 250 sh a re s
E v a n g e listic
service,
S unday,
p a r $100.00 p e r sh a re
T u esd ay and F rid a y , 7 :4 5 P. M.
S u rp lu s ................................. 10,000.00
A re tu rn e d m issio n ary from A fri U ndivided p ro fits— n e t -
16,704.37
ca w ill be in Irrig o n M onday, Sept.
$441,041.50
TOTAL
19, 7 :3 0 P. M., to show slides and
le c tu re . He w ill also show a d isplay U.S. G o v ern m en t o b lig a
tio n s ................................... $10,000.00
of a rtic le s from t h a t co u n try .
P led g ed a g a in s t S ta te ,
co u n ty , an d m u n icip al
H ERM ISTO N UNION CHURCH
d ep o sits .......................... 10,000.00
C. W a rn e r, P asto r.
Bible school 1 0 :0 0 A. M.
S ta te of O regon,
I
W o rsh ip serv ice 1 1 :0 0 A. M.
C ounty of U m a tilla
I ss'
7 :0 0 P. M., C h ris tia n E ndeavor.
I, A. H. N o rto n , c a sh ie r of th e
8 :0 0 P. M., C h u rch services.
M idweek p ra y e r a n d B ible study. above nam ed b a n k , do solem nly
sw e a r th a t th e above s ta te m e n t is
W ednesday, 7 :3 0 P. M.
tr u e to th e best of m y know ledge
L adies Aid each W ed n esday 2:00 an d belief.
A. H. NORTON, C ashier
P. M.
S ub scrib ed an d sw o rn to before
M issio n ary m eetin g , second W ed
me th is 1 0 th day of O ctober, 1938.
n esday of each m o n th .
W . J. W a rn e r, N o ta ry P u b lic.
B ible s c h o o l-s u p e rin te n d e n t Chas.
My com m ission e x p ire s Nov. 19,
D nv II;
P re s id e n t C. E .. W an d a
1940.
Moore: M isaioary Society p resid en t, C o rrect— A tte s t:
Mrs. C. R. Moore.
W . L. HAMM
F. B. SW AYZE
J. R. RALEY
PE N TEC O STA L TA BERN A CLE
D irectors.
A. B. T u rn e r, P a sto r
S u n d ay school a t 1 0 :0 0 A. M.
Mrs. H o w ard M ontgom ery. S upt.
M o rn in g w o rsh ip a t 1 1 :0 0 o'clock
C h ild re n 's serv ices a t th e p arso n
By MRS. W. C. ISOM
*
age a t 1 1 :0 0 . Mrs. T u rn e r In charge. ❖
----------
♦
E v a n g e listic serv ice In fh e eve <■
n in g a t 7 :4 5 P. M.
Mr. an d
Mrs. Ja c k
B row ning,
B ible S tu d y F rid a y a t 7 :4 5 P. M. M rs. Ed A dam s a n d M rs. K n ig h te n
CHURCH NOTES
*
.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ » » ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ •♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ » » ••» ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ •♦ ♦ » ♦ ♦ •O
CHURCH OF C H R IST
IRRIGON
4
m otored to B ak er S a tu rd a y evening.
S E V E N TH DAY ADV EN TIST
T h ey all re tu rn e d S un d ay n ig h t.
CHURCH.
R alph Jones, p rin c ip a l of th e lo
A. T. K in g sb u ry , E lder
cal
school, a tte n d e d a sch o o lm asters'
S a b b a th school a t 1 0 :0 0 A. M.
m eetin g in Salem la s t w eek.
Mrs. J. O. G ray, su p e rin te n d e n t.
P re a c h in g serv ice a t 1 1 :0 0 A. M.
T e ach ers in s titu te w ill be held
th e la st of th is w eek in P en d leto n .
M ETHODIST CHURCH
School w ill be closed T h u rsd ay and
S te a rn s C u sh in g , J r .. P asto r.
F
rid a y .
S u n d ay school 1 0 :0 0 A. M. J u n
Rev. W elhel of P e n d leto n w as In
ior c h u rc h 1 1 :0 0 . an d m o rn in g w or
ship a t 1 1 :0 0 . E p w o rth L eague al Irrig o n S unday.
7 :0 0 P. M. an d ev e n in g p ra ise and
Mr. an d Mrs. Geo. K en d ler Sr. of
p re a c h in g serv ice a t 8 :0 0 o ’clock.
U m a tilla visited W. C. Isom S unday
L adle«' Aid ev ery flra t and th ird evening.
W ednesday.
V ern Jones. W illa rd
and
Mrs.
J u n io r
ch u rc h
su p e rln te n d a n t.
Lola H u tc h iso n : L ad les’ Aid presi V onna L each left S a tu rd a y on a ten
d e n t.
Em m a
F elth o u ae:
S unday day h u n tin g trip .
school su p e rin te n d e n t, M abel B oul
T hom as W ells, co u n ty assessor,
w are; E p w o rth L eag u e p resid en t, w as d uck h u n tin g in Irrig o n over
E d w ard S haw .
th e w eek end.
FAST, DEPENDABLE SERVICE BETWEEN
Portland — Hermiston — Pendleton
La Grande and Baker
- BRICK BUILDING WEST OF CREAMERY ■
R A Y O LM STEAD
A gent
Telephone 681
Hermiston, Oregon
ID>PENDLETON MOTOR FREIGHT^TjNC
J