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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1939)
PAGE SIX THURSDAY, APRIL 20, THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. week's issue. ♦ ♦ ♦ V a r ie ty o f M e ta ls M a rk M a r r ia g e A n n iv e ra a riea Married couples who reach the happy time when they have been married 25 or 50 years celebrate Your co-op. store is in a position to serve you better. Our overhead these two anniversaries as their is lower, and our prices are lower. Consumer co-ops are succeed silver and their golden wedding, re ing because they are a practical application of sound economics. spectively, and the husband is sup posed to give his wife a present of the m etal named. Other m etals are deem ed suitable for lesser anni versaries; the longer the length of tim e the more valuable the metal. The first year’s anniversary is the R egular or Quick Cooking - lbs. iron wedding, the fifth the copper, the tenth the tin. As the supply of m etals won’t go round, other sub stances are chosen by those who like to celebrate almost every re ♦ ♦ ♦ BIG VALUE! curring m arriage date, observes a Fresh Roasted T ake a tin can to th e garden with PURE writer in London Tit-Bits magazine. Fresh Ground you about one-third filled with So we have paper for the second, lb. coal-oil, and flip beetles and worms leather for the third, wool for the seventh, and silk for the twelfth, into It as you go. the fifteenth crystal and the twen ♦ ♦ ♦ tieth china, pearl and ruby for the If you wish choice d ah lia bulbs, thirtieth and fortieth, the diamond Lb. can get in touch w ith Mrs. Joe Udey. is the sixtieth anniversary, and the She has finished her p la n tin g and platinum the rarely-reached seven Large - Per doz. will dispose of her su rp lu s a t a trif tieth. Queen Victoria was, on one occa L arge Yellow or ling cost. Blue & W hite © For sion, asked to mark the seventieth wedding anniversary of two old sub jects by conferring on them some T O W N S E N D F LA SH ES. mark of royal favor. She refused, The Townsend club m eeting was however, saying that she considered well attended last F rid ay night. 75 years the diamond period. PHONE Not everyone agrees on the appro Many im portant issues were dis 401 priate gift; m any call the first an cussed and several com m ittees gave niversary cotton, the fifth, wooden; reports. A report from head q u ar the fifteenth, copper. But all are ters was read sta tin g th a t our bill agreed about silver and gold. giving a valuable list of books, mag is soon to be put before th e finance ❖ azines and pam phlets. GARDEN CLUB com m ittee of the Senate— also a re Members of garden clubs in othei ♦ port th a t Oregon has put in 8000 L a r g e , V a lu a b le F o r e sts CHATS cities were guests at th e m eeting new members into th e ir club since In t h e N o r th e r n S e c tio n and presidents of these clubs spoke There is a great land m ass, 10,000 Ja n u a ry 1. feet high or over, in the region of A record attendance of Garden briefly on the aim s and accom plish Miss Mumma, piano teacher, gave the South pole, whereas around the club members and guests enjoyed a m ents of th e ir various groups. Mrs. talk by Mrs. George M itchell of E arl Thompson, Pendleton, Mrs. A. a very pleasing piano solo. Mr. H a t North pole there is water or ice surface at sea level. In general it Pendleton at the m eeting last Mon C. E bert, Echo, and Mrs. W. T. field's 4-year-old son was very clev is colder at the South Polar region Reeves, Stanfield, wpre presidents er in answ ering Townsend questions. day. A fter a short business meeting than at the North Polar region, be The next m eeting of th e club will the speaker was introduced by Mrs. from th eir respective clubs, and Mrs. cause of thia greater elevation, both be held A pril 28 a t 7:30. All mem the average tem peratures and the H. K. Dean, chairm an of the h o rti A. E. M cFarland of U m atilla, who bers are urged to be present to extrem e tem peratures being lower. cultural committee. Mrs. M itchell’s was unable to be present, was repre- elect a delegate to send to the fourth The area of Antarctica or the Ant cented by Mrs. H arry Hull. talk was on th e subject, "Shrubbery The reg u lar table decoration was Townsend n ational convention from arctic regions is estim ated at over in Home B eautification.” Mrs. Mit 5,000,000 square m iles, or equal to by Mrs. M. P. Cassedy. P in k and Ju n e 22 to 25 to be held in In d ian a chell is the wife of the superintend Australia and Europe without Rus polis, Ind. Com m ittee presidents en t of th e Pendleton field station. w hite flow ering alm onds and lilacs sia. The Britannica contrasts the Mrs. M itchell has made a study of were used. Many other bouquets of are asked to m ake rep o rts a t th is this phase of garden planting, as sp rin g flowers w ere placed ab o u t the m eeting. A program w ill be fu rn North and South Polar regions thus: ished by the new ly elected com mit Within the area north of 60 degrees well as practical work along this room. tee of Mrs. Morehouse, Mrs. H artley latitude live more than a million ❖ ❖ ❖ line a t the station, and her talk was and Mrs. P rindle. A jitn ey lunch human inhabitants and countless very helpful to the am ateur garden At the next m eeting th e sending will be served by th e au x iliary lad land animals. Some of the largest ers in the audience. Notes taken of a delegate to the sta te federation and m ost valuable timber forests ies a t th e close of th e m eeting. The are north of this line, and not a few a t the m eeting prove too voluminous of garden clubs a t F orest Grove, public is alw ays invited. industries connected with lumber, for this column, but she spoke on May 15, 16 and 17, will be dis mining and fishing flourish. In the foundation and boundary planting, cussed. sim ilar area in the southern hemi- | GRADE CROSSING continuing bloom throughout the ❖ ❖ ❖ sphere, there is not a single per season, and shrubs and perennials manent human inhabitant nor a sin In an endeavor to catch up w ith ACCIDENTS CITED suited to this locality, as well as the unusually early season the flow gle human animal larger than an insect. There are no trees and few er show com m ittee is considering If a person has an earn est desire plants of any kind. The sole indus advancing the d ate of the show. This try is whaling, carried on a few will be decided upon and announced to com mit suicide w hile driving his months of each year. Probably H. A. WILSON autom obile, a tim e-tested method is less than 100 square m iles of this later. CASH BUYER to drive upon a railroad track in vast area are free from a perma ❖ ❖ <• HOGS — CATTLE fro n t of a ro arin g passenger train , nent covering of ice. Spots to serve as focal points for according to Secretary of S tate E arl VEAL — SHEEP Phone 42J5 Hermiston, Ore. the pilgrim ages announced in the Snell. program books will be stated in next Gibbon Roosts in Tree Y et w hile a high proportion of The gibbon is the m ost two-legged fata lities resu lt from accidents in of the anthropoids. Proportionate which locomotives strik e autom o ly, his upright gait, leg length and biles which drive in fro n t of them, posture are more nearly like ours approxim ately half of all grade than are those of the other apes, (ft crossing accidents resu lt from the although his top weight is usually autom obile's ru n n in g into the train . about 14 pounds and there is nothing human about the way he travels This type of m ishap is especially when speed is the essence; he can common a t n ig h t when visibility is swing across a 40-foot space be WILL OPEN THEIR EYES tween trees with a precision and poor. I ^ s t sum m er a tru ck driver w«as timing that only wings could im AT THESE SPECIALS— crushed to death and his tru ck bad prove. His usual night roost is a ly wrecked when he drove it Into crotch in a tree, h it unlike other apes he clasps his knees after he the side of a train of fla t cars w hich gets his back settled against the was stan d in g a t a crossing, afte r trunk. One of the com m onest in dusk. The year before an o th er driv stinctive gestures of man is to bare 8 oz. Westag er was killed when he drove past 13 ly close one hand and draw the back autom obiles stopped at a grade of it laterally, lightly, across his crossing and crashed into the side of lips. This is exactly the manner Sliced - No Rind Lb. in which the gibboa drinks; he wets a slowly-m oving freig h t train . T his the fur on the back of his hand and accident also occurred a t night. uses it as a drinking sponge. W atchfulness and caution should Large Package be th e rule a t grade crossings, be Frogs Make Long Hops cause tra in s w hich are moving fast Any ordinary frog can hop 18 for cannot be stopped in tim e to avoid Maca trouble, even though th e engineer inches, but it takes a trained jumper to do better than 10 feet. For som e may see the approaching automobile. reason American frogs hop farther than those of Europe, says the Washington Post. Usual training methods are sim ply to make croak lbs. ers jump frequently, develop their Hard Wheat hind legs. But they are tem pera m ental, often refuse to perform in Large 2 ^ size a contest. An old one, the sport was especially popular in early 3 for 29c Western mining cam ps. Prospectors often wagered thousands of dollars Graham or White GATE-CRASHERS BALL GAMES • ■ T M A N V A B R U IS * * . on a single leap. 2 lb. box Trade With Yourself MACARONI gl£0 2 Lb* 9c OATS 9 37c COFFEE Corn 3 25c Lard 15* M. J.R. COFFEE 4 We now believe in S an ta Claus, even if he did come to us when it was 87 in the shade. H is g ift to the com m unity took the form of a check for 110.00 from th e Pendleton Men's chorus, as th e ir unsolicited donation tow ard the expenses of th e concert a few weeks ago. It was one of those fine things th a t occasionally happen and we are su re th a t the com m unity will show th e ir appre ciation when the chorus retu rn s to en te rta in us next year. T his makes a to ta l at $35.35 secured from the concert for th e p ark k itchen fund. 4 “* 39c $ 1 .0 9 S u n k is t Lemons C/% A O HERMISTON MERCANTILE COOPERATIVE T w o S leep y P eople VANILLA BACON 18c EGG NOODLES IO C YEAST IO C PEANUT GUTTER MACARONI PORK & DEANS CRACKERS *»> S9C 4 19c IO C 19c CORN Cream Style 3 cans 21« COCOA 2 lb. can 17c LARD Pure 4 lbs. 39c BEANS Small White 10 lbs. 39c EGGS Fresh Standard - Doz. A Famous Dungeon One of the m ost famous dungeons in history is in the Chateau de Chil- lon on Lake Geneva in Switzerland. Between 1530 and 1536, says Col lier’s Weekly, it w as the prison of Francois Bonivard, a politician and the hero of Byron’s poem, "The Prisoner of Chillon,” Since that time, countless tourists have visited the cell and thousands have in- I scribed their names on its walls, among them being Byron, George i Sand and Victor Hugo. BUT RAILROAD C A T«-C R ASH ER S « « T H B A O U H R S IW N E W « / Lincoln at Prayer C W ISC LC R S IN A A A ttB L * W IW F A M * A N D « IN O W N . Connor’s Cash Store Phone 501 O I S B l E f t S IN T R A P S IC W I N S IX F B B T O F • R . O U N 'P Z * The statue called Lincoln at Pray er is in the Washington cathedral, Washington, D. C. It was executed by Herbert Houck of Harrisburg, Pa., and presented by his sister, Mrs. William T. Hildrup, Jr., of New York. Houck was inspired to make the statue by hearing his grandfather recount his experience of com ing upon Lincoln on his knees The figure in the statue is kneeling on a blanket of leaves. 1939. Girls Of That ‘Uncertain Age’ Get Life’s Answers Early N C E a month the teen-aye girls of Bethlehem, Pa., gather in the high-school auditorium “to find out.” The doors are locked; not a boy is in sight. Life grows more pleasant, living more gracious because of these meetings; tor here the girls unburden their minds of questions they would not ask even the most sympathetic mother— questions o f * tnor; a u and manners. O The Bethlehem Girls’ Council came into being three years ago. group of enlightened women heard of a plan dealing with the problems of high-school girts and set about putting it into effect. They succeeded so well that the National Council of Women now has adopted the Beth lehem Plan and stand ready to spon sor girls’ councils all over the country. The plan is simply this: to let the girls teach themselves, rather than be k . ured to, through their own dramatizations of playlets of morals and manners. There la a question- bos into which the girls drop any quaetiona they choose. They do not sign their names. From these ques tions the monthly plays are chosen. Members of the women’s committee prepare a rough script and turn it over to the girls for polishing. Teen age language and atmosphere, of course, are employed. Helen Welshimer, who was sent to Bethlehem by Good Housekeep ing to make a first-hand study of the plan, relates her impressions in an article called “The Questions They Ask” in the April issue. She reports that all of Bethlehem agrees the plan is “the best thing that ever struck this town.” The playlets range in theme any where from the problems of smok ing, drinking and petting to how to acquire charm, poise and personal ity- The following are A few of the questions already successfully an A swered: How should you handle a boy who tries to get fresh? Should you leave a boy when ho has had too much to drink? What do you think about going on blind dates? How do YOU rate at a dance ? Is it right, when you have gono out with a boy a few times, to let him kits you good-night? In addition to these dramatisa tions, there are personal-appearatme clinics and pre-marriage and pre business classes, usually reserved for senior girls. Famous women hyaicians lecture on hygiene and ealth; then the girls hand in un signed, written questions — the frankest sort of questions—which the lecturer answers in equally frank language. Thanks to the Bethlehem Plan, girls of that “uncertain age” are going to have an easier time of it. They will be able to meet the world with greater assurance, knowing that what they have been taught will help make them better wives, better mothers and better citizens. The National Council of Women is going to act as a clearing house’ for communities throughout the country, providing them at cost with detailed outlines of the Bethlehem Plan. The National Council of Women, Inc., may be reached at International Building, Rockefeller Cent«,. New York City. E