Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1940)
PAGE SIX ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ C H U R C H NOTES In the past it is your patronage that has built BIG BUSINESS. Now, by loyal patronage of your consumer owned store, you can make YOUR OWN BUSI NESS BIG. It will pay you well to take an active part in and support loyally all the local cooperative enterprises. bean, Mild Cure B A C O N Medium Weight Lb. 17c Good Seasoning Lb. 11c Bacon Squares P E A S BIG VALUE Small No. 2 sieve. Big No. 2 tins Big Value - Walla Walla Canned COFFEE Per tln.............. 1O< C o -o p C o ffe e An economy coffee that is good to drink Try it! £ lb. 3 lb. glass jar ................. Pork & Beans Granulated BORENE Soap HOME STYLE No. 2% tins 73* 10c 29c Large Pkg. H E R M IS T O N M E R C A N T IL E C O O P E R A T IV E ’SKT petals curled and twisted like the chrysanthemums we buy during the football season. This marigold was awarded a bronze medal in the all- American class for 1940. The blooms By Mrs. T. A. O'Grady are nearly three Inches across and This is the best month for fire should come on seven weeks from side gardening, planning the garden planting. ❖ ❖ ❖ on paper, sending off for seed cata logs and pasting all those clippings Have you ever tried planting in the garden scrap book. If you grapefruit seeds? They can be have not sent for your seed and grown successfully in a dish with plant catalogs yet, now is the time out a drainage hole, but will do even because It is only nine weeks, sixty better in a small pot. Plant the eight more dayB until the first of seeds about an inch deep, keep the April. There is much help and in soil moist and then forget them. Af spiration in a new seed catalog with ter you have given up hope that the colorful Illustrations and news they are going to grow you will be of the new varieties offered for surprised one morning to see the 1940. sturdy green shoots coming through Some of the new introductions the soil. The leaves are glossy and were mentioned last week, but there attractive and the small trees will are many more. A new nasturtium, do well without full sunlight and the Sun Ball, is highly recommend with very little care. Avocado seeds ed. The plants are dwarf with fol handled in the same manner will iage much greener than usually make good looking plants. found in nasturtiums. The flowers O ♦ ♦ are a soft creamy yellow and very Next meeting, Friday, January sweet scented. Limelight, a large soft primrose yellow marigold has 26th, the speaker will be Harry F. Cline of the Oregon State Extension Service. Mr. Cline's subject will be "Garden Pests." Do you remember the New Year’s resolutions we all made to attend the club meetings and to help make our club a real live active one? o ♦ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ * * THURSDAY. JANUARY 25, 1»4S. THE H ER M IS TO N HERALD. HERMISTOhLOREGON GARDEN CLUB C H ATS " * “Read ’Em and Reap” our ads Money Savers YEAST, Fleischmann’s ..................................... >£ YEAST, M aca...........................................2 for FLOUR, 4-Peaks, absolutely guaranteed $1.^ 9 SOAP CHIPS, White E ag le............5 lb. pkg. VANILLA, W estag (imitation) ..... 8 oz. bot. TOMATO JUICE, 10 oz. c a n .......................... £# WAX PAPER, lge. 125 ft. ro lls ...................... IX# CORN STARCH, 10c s iz e ..................2 pkgs. HONEY, light lo c a l......................... 5 lb. pail 39$ MATCHES, made in Tacoma, ctn. of 6 boxes CRACKERS, fresh each week ....... 2 lb. box 1G# PEAS, Walla Walla small No. 2 sieve, No. 2’s 1O< TOILET T IS S U E .................................. 6 rolls lg< ORANGES, Sweet and ju ic y .................. doz. JO# COFFEE, Hills Bros..................................... lb. 24# CORN, whole kernel full No. 2 can .. tAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAl Valuable Coupon 1 package 80 embossed N A P K IN S ► S C with this coupon— ► “ Connor’s Cash Stores PHONE 2761 — HERMISTON holds the accomplishment of His own purposes of love and blessing. On January 28 at 7:30 p.m. in the Seventh Day Adventist chapel, this Boardman Community Presbyterian topic, “Why Was Sin Permitted?" Church shall be presented by Ivan Schaber. Rev. John K. Walpole, Pastor Come, and bring your questions. Sunday school, 10 a. m. Christian Endeavor 7:00 p.m. Mrs. George Corwin, sponsor. Evening worship, STANFIELD SCS CAMP MAKES 8:00 o’clock. Special program and PROGRESS DURING YEAR music by the young people. Every one is cordially invited. (Continued from Page One) Choir practice 7:00 p. m. at the church. Sunday school teachers’ meeting, another major job of the Stanfield camp. Most of these are two-row Thursday, Feb. 1st, 6:45 p.m. at the and three-row plantings of black lo home of Mr. and Mrs. Messenger. cust, Russian olive and pine. First Prayer meeting will follow at year growths of locust measuring up 7:30 at the same place. to seven feet have been noted, and Ladies Aid meeting Wednesday, the survival of these plantings to February 7th. date is more than 90 per cent. The Morning worship will be resumed at the Boardman church Sunday, total windbreak acreage is 49 acres. Where "blow” spots have started February 4th. and are spreading, more trees are being set out to tie down the rest Irrigon Community Presbyterian less soil. With irrigation water Church available, it has been found that Rev. John K. Walpole, Pastor black locust will grow on even the Morning worship 10 a.m. Sermon by the pastor. Sunday school 10:45 a.m. Ladies Aid will have an all day meeting and pot luck dinner Thurs day, February 15th, at the home of I Mrs. Rucker. Umatilla Community Presbyterian Church Rev. John K. Walpole, Pastor Sunday school 10 a.m. Morning worship 11 a.m. Sermon by pastor. Christian Endeavor 7:15 p.m. Missionary meeting Thursday af ternoon, January 25, at the home of Mrs. Byrnes. Evening services will be resumed at the Umatilla church on Sunday, February 4th. This will be a spec ial program and music in charge of the young people. HERMISTON BAPTIST CHURCH Grayden D. Loree, Pastor In the twentieth chapter of Matt hew we read the story of the man who went out early in the morning to hire workers to labor in his vine yard. He agreed to pay them the common wage. As he saw need for more workers he went out again at various times of the day and hired others. At the eleventh hour, 5:00 p. m., he went to the market place and finding idle men he sent them also into his vineyard to work. At the close of the day each one re ceived the same wage although some had worked twelve hours while oth ers had worked only one hour. Each one who believes in the blood of Jesus Christ will be saved and gain entrance into heaven regardless of whether he serves the Lord many years or few. However we must re member that there is a life to save as well as a soul. The topic at the 11 o’clock worship service will be "Souls saved, but lives lost.” There will be baptismal following the mes sage. B.Y.P.U. meets at 6:45 p.m. with Barbara Follett leading. The even ing evangelistic service is at 7:45. METHODIST CHURCH Stearns Cushing Jr., Pastor Bringing to a close the series re lating to "Life,” the subject for the Sunday morning worship service will be "Measurably Christian." Liv ing in a day of strenuous conditions one’s Christian experience must be one that is active, dynamic and vital. In view of the world problems, the church will either take the lead in their solution or else when the cri sis comes the church will be treated as it is today in Russia, and Germa ny. You are invited to hear prob lems considered in the light which JeBus Christ brought to a sin bur dened world. The services for the Sabbath be gin with Sunday school at 10 a. m., Junior church under the leadership of Mrs. Lois Shaw at 11, morning worship with special music by the choir at 11 o’clock and the Epworth League at 7 p. m. with Zelma Sale leading the discussion. A hearty in vitation is extended to you. SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Through the past ages the begin ning of sin and the reason for its existence have been a fountain of great perplexity to many minds. But with the passing of time this problem has remained to many a mystery beyond comprehension. They have seen the work of evil, with its fruitage of woe and deso lation and to them the question has occurred time after time, “If God is truly the sovereign of the universe, the One who is infinite in under standing, in might and in love, how can He allow such things to contin ue." But God who is ruler in the heav ens and on earth, sees the end from the beginning. To Him the past holds no hidden secret, neither doee the future. They are alike before Him as an opened book. Beyond the woe. the darkness and the deeola tion that ein has brought. He be worst blow areas. Also being dem onstrated are the best methods of harvesting fence posts, fuel and oth er wood products the trees in thq windbreaks will produce in this sec tion where timber is 60 miles away. The selective cutting and related woodland management practices are demonstrated in older existing woodland plantings of farmers with whom the service is cooperating. Still aiming at better land use in ail respects, the irrigation farmers likewise are working out soil-build ing crop rotations, better pasture management plans, and more effect ive water distribution systems. The rotation, used pn most of this land, consists of 4 to 6 years of grass and legumes and 2 to 3 years of grain or cultivating crops. During the years of cultivation, crop residues, straw or manure, and winter cover crops are used as protection against wind erosion. The improved irrigation systems are planned and are being developed on 626 acres. Along Butter Creek, just south of Hermiston, livestock farmers depend SPECIAL OFFER WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION Collier’s — American — 14 Moe. $4.00 — New or Renewal Offer Good U ntil Feb. 10 Georgia Henderson — Hermiston upon early spring creek flow for flood-irrigating their bottomland alfalfa fields. The CCC's are help ing them to build dams in the creek to hold back more water and raise the creek channel to a point where sub-irrigation will be more effect ive. Of the 256,449 acres involved in the 42 plans worked out for -Stan field camp cooperation, 200,000 acres is range land. On It, a de tailed survey has been completed and range management plans devel oped on the basis of its needs as shown by the survey. Similarly, soil surveyors have finished a con servation survey on 220,000 acres. HAVE YOU FOUND OUT HOW MUCH YOU CAN S A V R S A F E W A Y ? F a n c y C o rn No. 2 tin Country Home, Golden 9* There’s an easy way to find out how much you can save on your food budget. Do all your shopping at Safeway for just one month and then COMPARE. You’ll find that Safeway has saved you real money, and remember, your Safeway store has the lowest prices • Tomatoes Large tin 6 DAYS— FRIDAY thru THURSDAY NIGHT Whole Kernel Corn Alpine Old Faithful Golden Bantam P E A S Makes Salads Better 10c Duchess Salad Dressing 3 No. 303 tins Trellis, A real buy Sunmaid Raisins > 2 25c 15 oz. Pkgs. 15c Doz. 35c Lb. 19c 46 oz. Tin 19c Seeded or Seedless B le a c h e r EGGS Vs gal. jug Magic White Large Fresh Grade A J e ll W e ll Mild Full Flavored Darigold Cheese Package Assorted Flavors 4* Cocoa 2 lb. tin Blue Mill 15* E g g N o o d le s Orange Juice Bruce’s Ask for EDWARDS Blend to suit the moet exacting coffee lovers — Vacuum Packed. i-n>. Tin 21c Lge. 14 oz. pkg. Big Value S u -P u r b Gran. Soap - 24 oz. pkg. « sa 50 oz. Economy size 35c M IL K 3 tall tins Cherub xo# P ean u t B u tte r 41c Airway C offee..........2 lbs. 25c - 3 lbs. 35^ Nob Hill C offee............lb. 19c - 2 lbs. 35< Harvest Blossom Flour .... 49 lb. sk. $1.29 Kitchen Craft Flour..........49 lb. sk. $1.49 Pork & Beans, H einz......... 2 lge. tins 2$^ Macaroni or Spaghetti ............ 10 lbs. 49« Fancy Rice, full heads................5 lbs. 29^ Old Dutch Cleanser.................... 2 tins 15< Cudahy Deviled M eat........No. V4 tin 3tf Taste Tells Hot Sau ce................ 3 tins 10tf Albers Flapjack Flour ..... . 4 lb. sack 23< 2 >ba. Real Roast Perfection or your Money-Back! Guaranteed Meats Friday & Saturday Deef Pet Roast Friday & Saturday O ra n g e s Fancy Sunkist Large Jumbo Size Doz. Deef Oven Roast lb. 1 9 c Deef Steaks lb. »5* Finest cuts from select beef 20« Finest quality, rib or sirloin Lem ons Sunkist Full of Juice Sliced Bacon C a rro ts lb. Morrell's Rindless 2 lge. bunches Pork Chops New Spring !b. 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