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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (May 30, 1940)
PAO« FOUR THE HERMISTON HERALD. HERMISTON. OREGON. The Hermiston Herald Published Every Thursday at Hermiston, Umatilla County, Oregon. Alfred Quiring and Leander Quiring, Publishers. UMATILLA NEWS By Mrs. Glenn Ostrom THURSDAY, MAY 30, l# 4 0 . » ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦» ♦ ♦ » ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ » ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ » » ♦ » » » ♦ ♦ » ♦ » » ♦ » » •••» •••O THE ,__, OWL i t Shopping for low cost insur IN THE Harry Hull accompanied Alof Stangeby, a salesman, on his trip ance is about as sensible as an this week. He expects to be away aviator saving money buying a from his duties at his store until af ter the first of the month. The trip tissue paper parachute. If he NEW SEED ACT takes them into northern California. Entered at the post office at Hermiston as Second has to use it, nothing but the Jack Geer, who is visiting AIDS GROWERS her Mrs. Class Matter, Dec. 1906, Umatilla County, Oregon. sister Mrs. Leland Smith from best is good enough. If he knew her home in Kinzua, spent Thursday Subscription Rates and part of Friday at Ballock Island he would never need it, he Latest Federal Law Requires where she visited her children. The One Y ear.......................................... $2.00 latter are staying with their grand would get along without it en Additional Labeling. Six Months ...................................... 1.00 parents Mr. and Mrs. Clarence tirely. Powell. Three M onths......................................... 50 By MISS JESSIE FISKE Miss Clara Corrigan has purch Payable in Advance The passage of the new Federal ased a 1940 Pontiac coupe. You don’t know what is going to happen. The safe thing to do Seed act early last fall brings into Mr. and Mrs. James Byrnes and operation a piece of agricultural daughters Office Telephone ............................ 2051 is to let the agent of your local insurance agency give you real, in Joan and Mrs. V. D. Bra- legislation which is of great impor mer and children James and tSella Residence Telephone ....................... 2333 telligent insurance protection in a sound stock company, fitted ; [ tance to all the farming sections of Rae arrived home Friday evening the country. This became apparent from a six day trip, visiting friends exactly to your own need. Then you will be safe if the unexpect- ! I after a study made of the law at and relatives in The Dalles, Port < > Rutgers university. ed happens. Capital stock company insurance is standard protec- < land, Oswego, aSlem and Walport. It is the product of two years of They also went through the museum reg tion. study and preparation by the United at Maryhill, Wn. States department of agriculture, all Mrs. O. P. Miller and Mrs. El s s o c i a t i on u b l is h er s farm organizations, seed analysts, more McKenzie attended the flower and the seed dealers of the United show in Pendleton last Thursday, States. where Mrs. McKenzie entered sev Regulations are now in the hands eral displays and tied for three meeting. The grangers from West- of the U. S. secretary of agriculture places. OASIS TO SHOW "3 F. B. SWAYZE, President land at Hermiston were in charge. and the law is expected to be put Mrs. Bertha Cherry and Mrs. John Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation CHEERS FOR IRISH" The Trinity Y.G.A. is composed of into effect in the near future. The Kinney spent Friday in Pendleton. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hull purch members from Echo, Westland, Stan most outstanding change from pre ased a new 1940 Dodge sedan. vious legislation seems to be that a field and Columbia Granges. “Three Cheers for the Irish,” Miss Clara Corrigan and Mrs. larger percentage of seed shipments which will start on the Oasis screen Harold Laird, master of Westland, ■will be subjected to the require Harry Hull motored to Pendleton Sunday, promises to be one of the took part in the degree work. Don ments of seed control than has been Thursday where Miss Corrigan pur son Lindsay spepnt Sunday and Mon ia Baker, primary department; Sev chased a new Pontiac and they also day here. They rented their house to eral C. E. members will assist. warmest family stories emanating Sherwood, president of the Y.G.A. the case in the past. attended the flower show. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Martin. Transportation will be furnished. The provision of the new act re from Hollywood. was also present at last night’s meet Mrs. Ervin Chapman spent the Delbert Walpole left for Twin It concerns a retired New York ing. The principals in the Y.G.A. de quires that all interstate shipments latter part of last week in Walla Falls, Idaho, this week to spend the cop, Thomas Mitchell’s role, and his gree work are: Harold Laird, Alma of seeds be labeled if transported Walla with her husband, who is summer with his uncle on a ranch. seeding purposes, or properly employed there. three beautiful daughters, played by Laird, Floyd Laird, Marjorie Burn for identified if transported for seeding Mr. and Mrs. Bob Paige called at Mrs. O. P. Miller, Mrs. Bill Switz- By Ruth Fisher Priscilla Lane, Virginia Grey and ham, Margaret Seeliger, Mr. and purposes, or purveyor will be re the Geiss home en route to Cove thia Mrs. Elmore McKenzie and Mrs. Irene Hervey. Mrs. M. E. Knickerbocker, Helen quired to make representations con ler, week. Harry Hull attended the Hermiston They decided that Pop is to run Fix, Don Sherwood, Mary Frick, Mr. cerning every interstate shipment of Garden club meeting Friday. George Beardsley committed sui Angela and Russel DeMauro and seed. This regulation overcomes one for office of Alderman. The cam and Mrs. Donald Kirkpatrick. Herbert Lane, who has been in the cide in his room at the Stout home Phyllis Wilson went to The Dalles of the glaring weaknesses of the old army, Monday by shooting himself through paign progresses smoothly, aided by Thursday where they will visit rela stationed at Hawaii, returned Grangers taking the degree were: Alan Hale and William Lundigan, Mr. and Mrs. Don Niel, Ralph Doble, law, which provided that penalties home Friday to visit his parents, Mr. the head. He had long suffered from tives. for misrepresentation should be ill health. and Mrs. Herbert Lane Sr. until Irene accepts campaign funds and Mrs. Ralph Sievers. made, but failed to require that a Daily vacation Bible school opened Mr. and Mrs. Charlie DeHarte from a racketeer. Priscilla elopes The meeting was closed in regular representation be made. and son Alfred of Sunnyside spent at the Community church Monday with Dennis Morgan, a young rookie form by Worthy Master Hutchinson There has been introduced into Sunday here visiting her parents, morning with an enrollment of 43 WAKE UP BUSINESS children and seven teachers and help cop, disliked by Casey. Then Casey followed by a short program. Re the new legislation another depar Mr. and Mrs. A1 Stephpens. By Advertising In | / Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ostram and ers. Officers and teachers include discovers the source of his campaign freshments were served and enjoyed ture in the seed control program as Mrs. John Fisher, superintendent: son Gary Dean were Saturday din This Newspaper / it has developed in the past 30 years. money, and his public admission of by all. guests at the Lyle Brown home. Mr. Wald pole, intermediate boys; All persons transporting seed in ner Mrs. this dumbfounds the people into Ervin Chapman and daugh Mrs. R. Bergen, intermediate girls; ----- __ interstate commerce will be re electing him. Francis and Naomi Brownell Miss Lois Messenger, song leader quired to maintain a system of rec ter spent Wednesday of last week in and junior boys, also craft work for CEREAL COMPANY ords which will carry through all Pendleton. girls; Mrs. Lay, junior girls; Mrs. the steps from production to con Miss Clara Corrigan left for her Baker, Mrs. Walpole and Mrs. Soph YOUNG GRANGERS CHANGES PLANS sumption. home is McMinnville Saturday morn INSTALL OFFICERS Another feature of the law which ing. Mr. and Mrs. John Wurster and added protection deals specif An announcement was made early offers ically with the noxious weed seeds. Sara, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mc The Young Grangers of America in the spring that the Satisfaction Henceforth all interstate shipments Nabb and Diana and Freddie spent gave the first and second degrees Cereal Co. of Hardman would move of seeds must meet the noxious Sunday visiting friends in Mabton. Lew Fromdahl of Walla Walla Thursday, May 23, at Tillicum its mill to Hermiston. Neill Knigh- weed seed requirements of the seed Saturday visiting here. Grange, Pendleton, at their regular ten, manager, was in Hermiston over law of the state into which the ship spent V. D. Bramer, who is employed in ment is destined. the week end and stated that plans Kinzua spent Sunday and Monday with his family. for the Hermiston location had been Margarie Mustard, who is employ held up and would delay the change Group Machine Buying ed in Pendleton spent Sunday at the • P. A. for another year. Benefits Small Farmer home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. He stated, however, that sales of • VELVET Small farmers, forred to compete John Mustard. the cereal were very satisfactory and with larger, mechanized units op Bill Bennett, who has been in • HALF & HALF that present plans called for a mill erating on a scale big enough to Canyon City, returned last week. THOMPSON'S DRUG at Hermiston next year. John Powell of Ballock Island is afford expensive equipment, have visiting at the home of his sister. banded together in recent years to Mrs Leland Smith. purchase heavy equipment and ex Betty Mustard left last week for pensive services which none of them Longview where she will visit at the could afford to buy individually, the home of her sister, Mrs. A1 Laven Farm Security administration re der. ports. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Brown and Mr. The FSA makes group loans to and Mrs. Bill Hanson spent Monday its rehabilitation borrowers and in Pendleton. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mullins and other low-income farmers who can not get adequate credit from other lending agencies, public or private, to help them finance the purchase of machinery, live stock, equipment, and services which none of them could afford alone. The loans are repayable in from one to five years, according to the amount of the loan, the type, and US<O M O W E R S the life of the service. Three per cent interest is paid on loans for HORSE B U C K R A K E S equipment and service and 5 per cent on loans for purchase of sup plies and materials which are con NEW MOW ERS sumed during the year's farming operations. S W E fP R A K E S The list of equipment and services obta' ed by such group loans is al STACKERS most limitless. It includes com bines, silage cutters, purebred sires, SU LK Y RAKES cold-storage plants, bulldozers, ter racing equipment, syrup mills, hay balers, hatcheries, tractors, health services, and veterinary services. During the past four years, Farm There is still time to make arrangements for Security has mert» more than 10,000 Í E L E C T R IC R A N G E a haying demonstration with one of our John such loans involv.ng over $6,000,000 i and benefiting more than 180,000 Deere power hay machines, such as a power participants. mower sweeprake. Come in and let us show you the advanced performance and convenience features of the One of these demonstrations will prove how brilliant, new 1940 Westinghouse Ranges. They Farm Facts give you a ll the advantages of clean, safe, easy short and economical your haying problem real e le c tr ic cooking—economically. Check the ly is. Poultry sires and dams can be value and you’ll agree with the thousands of tested through their offspring not other shrewd range buyers that "this is the The trend of all farming operations in this only for egg production, but for size year to change to electric cooking” — with a and hatchability of eggs broodiness, world of low farm prices, is for a cheaper and Westinghouse! and other characters. • • • quicker operation and yet not lower the produc J» The number of horses on farms is tive style that we have to maintain in order to now the smallest in 60 years and the get the maximum in crops from our land. number of mules is estimated to be the smallest in 30 years. John Deere has endeavored to engineer their • • • tractors and farm implements to secure this re The use of canned milk has in creased steadily for a number of sult, because they know that to sell their pro years, but American consumers still ducts they have to show results in the modern get less than 10 per cent of their SMAU DOWN milk in cans, an economist says trend that farming has taken. • • • PAYM ENT 5-Spaed (area HaN Tree-Temp Ovea Itaaam y Caabar AND ONLY For electricity in poorer farm —heats 30% fast — with Balanced So call u* * and let u» help you. We know we — cooks complete er. uses 22% leaa homes, the REA is developing a Heat. Single D ial meal for 5 for puts this Big Value Beauty have shown some wonderful results to your c u r re n t th a n Control for ease small transformer and accompany a b o u t lc . N ow your home. Ask about our es beforeI o f uael neighbors. S-heat flexibility! ing equipment which will permit a payment plan. power line to be tapped for a charge as low as $1 a month Such equip ment will permit use of an electric iron, a radio and a few light bulbs. • • • That American farmers are using- Stores in Arlington, Heppner, Walls Walla and Athena. more macb ne \ is ' d ented by fig HERMISTON, OREGON ures showing »> t »rin ma. h'nery PENDLETON - PHONE S i l ---— — - •w sales were 3';»’ |r> -nt higher last year than at the bo'iom ot the dc C H IC K F O b V A L U E CHOOS! A W E $ T I H G N O V S E V 'iression O P OrtQjl ' M - ATTIC S'i&p E R ' FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HERMISTON I BOARDMAN NEWS 71 Poles 08 AU Kinds Hay and Turkey Poles 10c Also A ll Types Haying Repairs HAY MACHINERY INLAND COOPERATIVE », vnilR BIG VALUt ouse Braden-Bell Tractor & Equipment Ce. Oregon Hardware & Implement Ce. ’W. ...