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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1940)
PAGE s:x THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1940. THE H ER M IS TO N HERALD. HERMISTON. OREGON. I Sherrard says to take the shoot from ! where it joins the plant but to select one which has leaves but no flower I stalks and place in damp sand in a cool shaded place for several days. They slip quite easily. ❖ ❖ ❖ Next meeting is June 28. It is nice and cool in the basement of the library. We hope you can come. The C ooperative ¡d eal of ECONOMIC DEMOCRACY is growing and will grow with the years. Thinking people realize that the need for Economic De mocracy is as great as the need for Political Democracy. In order to be greatly successful the two must go together. To be effective in furthering man’s pursuit of life, liberty and happiness, and in securing man’s unalienable rights we must ever* strive for a larg er attainment toward Economic Democracy as well as cherish and guard our political democratic processes and rights. Consumer cooperatives especially are a practical application of real Democratic and Christian principles to the business of distri buting goods and services. F. B. A U XILIA R Y PLANS FOR SOCIAL Case 12 tins $1 90 17^ * qt. JtJ$ GRAPE JUICE, Churches, W orld’s Best, K IX BIG VALUE COFFEE You’ll Enjoy Its Full Flavor & Aroma. The different corn cereal p kg- 12$ TOM ATOES No. 2y2 t i n s .................. P. & G. WHITE NAPTHA SOAP 10 lge. bars Palmolive, Lux, Lifebuoy, Camay or Peets Mechanic SO A P ................................ bar Lb- 15$ 1O$ JO* BATHROOM TISSU E..................3 rolls for HERM ISTON MERCANTILE Yo'X: COOPERATIVE GARDEN CLUB CHATS By Mrs. Thomas O'Grady A garden friend recently wrote that each month she has made a stu dy of one flower and has learned to know that flower. She studies its cultural needs, the different varie ties, colors and its standard of per fection. She reads all she can find in magazines and garden books. At the end of the month she has made this plant a real part of her garden vocabulary. This seems to us to be a very practical method and one which this club might follow with good results. G. Lester White REFRIGERATION and AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE Household and Commercial Re frigeration — Furnace Conversion Oil Burners — Oil Furnaces Exhaust Fans, Self Contained Air Conditioners. FREE ESTIMATES Phone 3741 — Hermiston, Ore. It is very difficult this warm weather to keep cut flowers but if a few simple rules are followed they will keep much better. An article in “Your Garden and Home” gives the following advise: “It is essential not to gather the flowers in the hot sun. Gather in the cool of the evening and have a pail of water on the garden path and as you gather your blooms, hurry each cut stem deep into it and carry the pail back to the house and to darkness. There should be no pause between the cutting and the drink. In the case of Oriental pop pies, dahlias, zinnias, hollyhocks or other flowers having coarse heavy stems, char the ends of the stalks with the flame from a candle or the gas burner before putting them in the water. Never place flowers in a draft or where the sun can shine upon them.” ❖ ❖ If you have some carnations that you want to slip they will mafe con siderable growth this season. Drew EDMONDS ORCHARD CANNING APRICOTS Big crop and price low at Watch want ad in future issues. ICE CREAM COLD DRINKS FROZEN MILK SHAKES A ndy's Cafe w i l l n o w b e o p e n a ll n ig h t LUNCHES STEAKS DINNERS — W I M P Y 'S — H ere A r e S o m e SPARKLERS fo r t h e F o u r th C O F F E E ................................ lb. 12c - 3 lbs. S A L M O N , Alaska Pink .... can 12c - 3 for PORK ............ 30 oz. cans & BEANS PEA RS ........................... large can C O R N , Whole Kernel - Del M onte....... can T O M A T O E S , Solid Pack large can S A L A D O IL 25c qt., in bulk, gal. P R E M, All P o rk .................................. 2 cans CANDY IOC 15* IOC $9$ B A R S ............................. .....bar JE L L O 3 pkgs. 1 4* E G G N O O D L E S ..................16 oz. pkg. 19$ • ARE YOU GETTING YOUR PROFIT SHARING STAMPS? Connor’s Cash Store PHONE 2761 — HERMISTON CENTRAL CHURCH OF CHRIST C. Warner, Pastor The regular services will be held Sunday morning, Sunday School at 10 and regular morning worship ser vice at 11. The pastor will be out of town but Ralph Neill will fill the pul pit for the morning worship service. At the evening service, Cecil Ray Warner, the pastor’s son, now a stu dent in Northwest Christian Bible college, will preach. You will enjoy the messages by these young men. A welcome awaits you. --------- ------------------ METHODIST CHURCH Stearns Cushing, Pastor With a great deal of the world’s population under the iron hand rule of a dictator, the coming celebration of Independence day takes on added significance for the Christian com munity. “What is Freedom?” This will be the theme for the Sunday morning service. Can one be wholly Christian under an unchristion gov ernment? You are invited to join with us in our worship services. You will find a particular message for your needs. PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE Rev. E. D. Greeley, Pastor Our Bible school convenes at 10 a. m. An interesting service for child ren and all. The preaching service is at 11 A. M., with simple, whole some and scriptural exposition of Jesus Christ The Lord. An evening meeting is at 8, preceeded by a live ly inspiring song service. The pure gospel will be briefly ministered. Your presence at these services is sincerely desired for we believe you will be helped in every way. “Come thou and all thine house.” Rohrman Sells School Buses Rohrman Motor Company, local Ford dealer, was recently awarded the contract to furnish the Boardman school district with two new buses. The buses will have Bender bodies and will be mounted on special Ford school bus chassis equipped with 95 h. p. Mercury dry sleeve motors. These two units will be driven out from Elyria, Ohio. Rohrman was awarded the business on a competi tive bid basis. T M ilk Customer Route INSULATED BARN MAY BE DRAFTY IN HERM ISTON By E. R. GROSS Although insulated animal shel ters represent a great improvement over old-time, drafty farm structures, insulated structures may develop moisture conditions more prominent than those in a leaky building. For this reason, farmers are urged to study the ventilation problems in their barns and shelters before in sulating them. The day will undoubtedly come when insulated farm structures will be the rule rather than the excep tion. Insulation for farm buildings is not new, agricultural studies at Rutgers university reveal. The use of sawdust in the ice house is a good example of its early use. Now that farmers are better acquainted with the materials and how to use them and because insulation is now more readily available and reason able in cost, more farm buildings are being insulated than ever. Generally speaking, it pays to in sulate animal shelters. Insulation reduces the rate of heat loss from the building, hence should make it warmer and more comfortable for the live stock. Suppose, however, that cracks around windows and doors allow air leakage causing a greater heat loss than that through the walls themselves. Under these conditions, insulating the wall will do little good and is not advisable unless the doors and windows are also repaired to prevent air leaks. This sort of reasoning must be ap plied to poultry houses, dairy sta bles, hog houses, horse barns and the like. Early farm structures made of barn boards and battens had cracks allowing ample ventilation of its kind. The stock lived under rea sonably healthful conditions al though often at quite low tempera tures. Tighter walls resulted in less air movement with consequent con densation on walls and ceiling in dicating the need for ventilation. So we see that the use of insulation amplifies the ventilation problem and that the volume of air required for ventilation is so great that the flues must be very large. Government Develops Better Grass Strains Grass breeding is “catching up” with research on other economically important plant crops, reports M. A. Hein, pasture specialist of the fed eral bureau of plant industry. Grass long has been recognized as the cheapest of live stock feeds, but un til recently little attention was given to better grass strains through breed ing. ' Department forage specialists co-operating with various state ex periment stations have shown that grasses can be improved by breed ing as much as field crops. Recent studies, for instance, show that length of day, light intensities, air and soil temperatures all play an important part in grass growth. How to induce and increase the pro duction of grass seed, particularly in the Southeast and the Great Plains where many of the more de sirable and most promising grasses fail to produce any quantity of viable seed, is another problem that the sci entists want to know more about. Why some grasses are more palat able and higher in nutritive value than others also is being studied. To carry out grass studies as rap idly as possible, the country has been divided into regions where there is a similarity in the problems and consequently in the methods of at tack. Adaptation studies of large numbers of domestic and foreign grass species are made at nurseries in the various regions. In this preliminary work studies are made of the palatability and the reaction of the introduced grasses to grazing. As far as possible those that fail to show promise in this initial phase of the breeding program are elimi nated. Sail Eor French Indo China Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hammill left Sunday for Seattle, after a week’s visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hammill. They plan to sail for French Indo China July 1, where they will continue their minis terial work for six years. Both Mr. and Mrs. Hammill are graduates of Walla Walla college, and have been R. E, A. Dollars living in Port Angeles for the past For each dollar loaned by the Rur four years. al Electrification administration to bring central station service to farm Lodge M&n Visits At Umatilla communities, the farmer spends ap J. J. Walker, past grand master proximately another dollar for wir of the Odd Fellows lodge for the state ing and appliances so as to take ad of Idaho, and his wife spent Wednes vantage of the energy brought to day and Thursday of last week visit his home, REA records show. Avail ing their old friends, Mr. and Mrs. able electricity creates a demand for radios, irons, washing machines, Del Jackson of Umatilla. Mr. Walk water pumps, vacuum cleaners, and er plans to attend Sovereign Grand many other items that bring com j Lodge in West Virginia this fall, fort and entertainment to the farm j They were en route to Albany and home and employment to industry. coast points. Umatilla Rihle School Closes The Bible school at Umatilla has been in session for the past two weeks with a good attendance and much interest. Mrs. J. Byrnes has been superintendent and has been as sisted by Rev. and Mrs. John K. Wal pole and an able staff of teachers. The closing program will be at the community hall Friday night at 5 o'clock, at the close of which the Lad ies Aid will serve a 15c lunch. OPENING N E W o p ic s Ventilation Problems Must Be Closely Watched. The Farm Bureau auxiliary met Friday, June 21, at the Columbia park with a pot luck dinner being served at noon. A committee was ap pointed to take charge of the making of ice cream for the social to be held in the new club room Friday, July 19, at 8:00 o’clock with the public invited. The following committees were ap pointed: ice cream, Mrs. Jessie Cor man, Mrs. Doris Mikesell and Mrs. Ethel Hughes; program, Mrs. Emma Hutchison and Mrs. Fern Zivney. The proceeds of the social will go towards completing the club room. The west gate will be used where there is plenty of parking space. Tables are available for picnics at the park at the* present time, and will be found near the club house. GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ..................46 oz. tins F arm Skimmed Milk All farm ers know that skimmed milk is a good feed for pigs, but many people do not know just what its feeding value is. Skimmed milk, and buttermilk too, are both defi cient in vitamins A and D and in iron. Vitamin D, which aids in the assimilation of minerals, is supplied by the sun. Vitamin A and other vitamins, proteins and minerals, in cluding iron, are supplied by good pasture, and to some extent by green, leafy legume hay. MILK PRODUCED BY PUREBRED JERSEYS HAPPY THOT JERSEY FARM H. R. HARTLEY, Prop. PHONE 3941 - HERMISTON OUR DAIRY OPEN FOR INSPECTION AFTER JULY 1 — ANYONE INSPECT ING DAIRY WILL GET BOTTLE OF MILK FREE................................................ F rie d C hicken Sunday, June 30 PETE & GLADYS SAFEWAY Your M o n ey -S a v in g Cash Grocer 5 DAY SALE - FRIDAY THRU WEDNESDAY STORES CLOSED NEXT THURSDAY, JULY 4 GUARANTEED M E A T * ¿ ¿ ía & h td tei Sa^íevap's d íltts z H fa h /tíís Hams, Va or whole Morrell’s Tenderized Pork Chops ...... lb. Small Lean Cuts SÉ* Pure Lard .... 4 lbs. Sheaf Brand Frankfurters .... lb. Large Tender Wieners Shortening . 4 lbs. LUNCH MEAT Armour’s White Cloud Beef S teak ........lb. A large variety of tasty cold meats for a quick meal on these warm days. LB. Choice of Sirlpin or Rib Pork R oasts......lb. 25* Center Shoulder Cuts 1 lb. RITZ CRACKERS ......... WESTERN MATCHES 13$ pkg. NU-VITA WHEAT PUFFS 3 pkgs. 6 box carton 23 25$ WHEATIES ................ regular pkg. ] | Yellow O.K. RED LODGE W. K. CORN No. 2’s ] SOAP FLAVORADE .................... 3 pkgs. 25$ 10 bars CHIPS ] Qg NOB HILL COFFEE lb. 19c - 2 lbs. Z 15c pk«8- 2 5 c di nc Dell Blue Bell fresh, crisp potato chips. 1 POTATO I B r e a d 1 lb-9c >1/» lb- l3 c « Julia Lee Wright’s “sure-fresh” bread Spread 1 9 c qt 3 5 c “Lunch Box” sandwich spread. Pure, rich. ZEE PAPER FULL O’GOLD FRUIT COCKTAIL TOWELS GREAT NORTHERN CORN 2 tins 3 roll» 25$ BRUCE ORANGE JUICE 46 z. tin ] ^ $ ZEE PAPER DUCHESS SALAD DRESS., qt. jar NAPKINS DRIFTED SNOW FLOUR 49 lbs. Cello pkgs...... 7$ J Qg | 5^ 25^ $ ] 80 KITCHEN CRAFT ........... 49 lbs. $ ] 49 IN OUR FRUIT4TAND$ * fatten -facsk "p tio d u ci Friday and Saturday TOM ATOES 2 Lb’ 15c N E W PEAS 3 Lbs 14c LETTUCE 2 No. 1 Field Grown Tender Seattle Telephone Heads J gc Large - Firm - Fresh LEMONS Sunkist doz . 25c 360’s C A N TA LO U PES Large California Vine Ripened 2 19c