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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1940)
PAGE SIX T H E H E R M I S T O N H E R A L D , H E R M IS T O N . O R E G O N G r a n d f a t h e r ’s F a r m C a lls W o m a n T e a c h e r IN EVERY COMMUNITY where cooperative enterprise exis.s, it operates as an effective con trol of monopoly and as a safeguird against exploitation. The whole community benefits becaus ■ a group of its citizens has the courage and the initiative to strive to better their condition collect ively by cooperative enterprise. Cooperation is democracy appli id to business. It is a number of people working together owning and controling the policies of the business that furnishes them with goods and service. Every citizen should support and take an active part in the affairs of their co ops. because in so doing they are helping themselves. Their co-op’s success is their success. Their co-op’s gain is their gain. ROYAL PUDDINGS Gelatin Dessert or Pkg. CATSUP - Reliance Fancy . .. .............. 3 1 oz. can In a new economy container. 5* 19* SEAPORT COFFEE - Full Strength ... J lb. Full Flavor - Vacuum Tins PURE. LARD 4 lb. pkg. Solid Pack - No. 2 % Tins BIG VALUE COFFEE You’ll enjoy its full flavor and aroma. 15* LB. TOMATOES Ca" 33* lO c Graco Fancy MINCE MEAT 2 '- 15* CHOCOLATE DROPS 2 lbs. SUNBRITE CLEANSER 3 cans CO OP. BULK WASH. POWDER 5 Lb8’ J It’s All Soap - I t’s Quick Dissolving I t’s Easy on the Han Is - It Does the Work HERMISTON MERCANTILE PHONE COOPERATIVE 3011 We’re Here to Serve! METHODIST CHURCH Stearns Cushing, Pastor "The Church of the Living God”, what is it? Is there only One Church? The only Christian church in the gos pels is the apostolic band, and upon this little company of twelve men Je sus lavishes a large p a rt of the wealth of his time and thought and love. The New Testament knows nothing of any unity except that which is purely spiritual. Christ in the upper cham ber prays that his disciples may be one, but he does not ask that they be one in ritual or in government. Church school at the usual hour with just the class you need. The Ep worth League meets at 6 for the fel lowship hour, followed by the devo tional hour at 7. INFANT DAUGHTER DIES AT BOARDMAN Little Betty Jane Earwood, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Earwood of near Boardman, passed away Nov ember 24. The little miss was born September 10, 1940, reaching the age of two months and 15 days. She is survived by her parents, two sis ters, Margaret and Eleanor, and one brother, Kenneth. Betty Jane was a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Steinke of Arlington and Mrs. Mollie Earwood of Caldwell, Idaho. Funeral services were held at the Community church in Boardman Tuesday, November 26, with Rev. J. K. Walpole in charge. CARD OF THANKS We wish to take this opportunity to thank our friends and neighbors for the kindness and sympathy shown during the illness and death of our daughter and sister, Betty Jean Ear- wood. We especially wish to thank those who presented floral offerings. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Earwood and family. Home Extension Unit To Meet The Hermiston unit of the Home Extension service will meet Tuesday, December 10, at the Legion hall at 10:00 a. m. Mrs. W. B. Wilcox and Mrs. Canady will demonstrate dessert dishes. Don’t Drive Fast Slow Down for a Look at These M oney Saving Specials Pineapple No. 2 can - Sliced 11c 6 box carton M atches 12c Large 14 oz. bottle CATSUP 9c M IL K Federal - 4 large cans 26c T oilet T issue 3 Rolls 10c T om atoes Solid Pack - Large cai 10c Ripe - Large can OLIVES 11c Lb. 12c BACON • Ends 2 Lb. box 15c Crackers Lb. 15c Cranberries C hocolates Old Fashioned 2 Lbs. 19c Vegetable Lbs. 39c Formay Pure Shortening Connor’s Cash Store P H O N E 27 6 1 — H E R M I S T O N THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5. BOARDMAN NEWS By Elaine Fisher After a teaching career which Mrs. Mollie Earwood and daughter progressed from the little red schoolhouse to the school of speech, and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Syracuse university, Mrs. Grace S. Strain of Caldwell, Idaho, attended Bull of Syracuse has virtually re the funeral of their little grand turned to her birthplace on prolific daughter and niece, Betty Jean Ear- and historic acres among the Madi wood, Tuesday. Roy Earwood of Prineville attend son county hills. She owns the farm her grandfather operated almost a ed the funeral of his little niece Bet Jean Earwood Tuesday. century ago, she did nearly all the ty Mr. Mrs. Herman Steinke and mowing on the farm during the 1939 family and from Arlington attended the season and she saw her herd of Hol- funeral of their little granddaughter I steins develop in two years to the and niece, Betty Jean Earwood, Tues j highest rating in the county’s his- day. ____________ ! tory. But beyond that, she finds that in PENTECO STAL TA B E R N A C LE 1 spite of a long period of urban exist- S. E. Graves, Pastor j ence, the call of the soil is still strong I l you are not attending Sunday and clear, the same call her grand- lather answ ered back in 1852, writes School and church you are denied a ! Joseph H. Adams in the Syracuse privilege and blessing which should Post-Standard. At every opportunity be yours. We should highly appre i she rides eastw ard from Syracuse ciate having yiu a visitor with us. I through Fayetteville, through Chit- i tenango, past the old stone cheese You will enjoy the fellowship, sing factory and then deeper and deeper ing, praying and preaching of those down a rustic winding road to a spot who know the Lord, Come. she has always loved through the Bible school 10:00 a. m. Sunday. A years. class for every age. 11:00 A. M., Over the gravel road which en- morning worship. Children don’t for | tors the farm on the fringe of sturdy get, we have a growing junior church tri ?s she passes, to stop finally near or.e of a group of red barns. And at this hour also. E:30 P. M., even there she is met by a flurry of joy ing service. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., and animation as her collie, Trixie, Bible study. leaps forward to greet her with such eagerness that tlie animal comes in C E N TR A L CHURCH OF CH RIST credibly close to human speech. C. Warner, Pastor And Mrs. Bull, who was born in This is. the last week of our revi the grand old homestead, is just as eager to be back where she spent a val meeting. The evangelist’s sermons for Sun happy childhood and where she in tends one day to take up her resi day are, “The True Test of Disciple dence again. ship,” and Sunday evening, “The Last Test of Salvation.” The special music for Sunday C la im P a la c e in H a i t i morning will be an anthem, “The A ir-C o o le d 130 Y ears A g o Lord Is My Light” by the choir. A basket dinner will be served fol To those who imagine that the idea of air conditioning is new it lowing the Sunday morning service comes as a surprise to learn that and a meeting for men at 2:15. an effective system was put in effect The Sunday night service will be over 130 years ago by the black Em the closing service of the evangelistic peror Henri Christophe in his Ttalace meeting. at Sans Souci, in Haiti. Christophe, the most despotic king of his day, employed air con HERM ISTON B A P T IST CHURCH Grayden D. Loree, Pastor ditioning to cool his regal palace rooms as long ago as 1808. In keeping with Universal Bible Built over a rushing mountain Sunday our morning theme will be stream in order to perm it the cool “The Book”. There is only One Book waters to refresh the regal rooms, that will meet the needs of humanity this palace contained a sumptuous banquet hall and cham ber of gilt today, that which we call the Bible. The young people meet a t 7 o’clock m irrors that held a richly carved mahogany throne. Other rooms to discuss the topic, “The Source of contained Gobelin tapestries and Our F aith”. At 8 o’clock the pastor paintings of old m asters, a great li will bring a message on the subject j brary brought from Europ -, but “The Meaning of Repentance”. “Let never touched, as Christophe could the wicked forsake his way, and the | neither read nor write. Even in its present state of ruin unrighteous man his thoughts; and ! and decay, Sans Souci is splendid. In its heyday it was approached through a huge gateway guarded by gold-colored sentry boxes, which are still standing, guarding this spectre of a glamorous past, From this palace tourists proceed by mule or horseback through Hai tian jungle, coffee, banana and orange groves to the Citadel of La Ferriere, also built by the black king, on the crest of a jungle-clad • ORANGES....... ... mountain. New Crop Navels - 176 Size N A TU R A L LY , Happy Thot Jersey Farm M ilk Is Better! I t’s the milk from pure bred Jerseys which have been bred for centuries to insure a better product. Not only is our milk richer in butterfat but we believe that it has the lowest bacteria count in town. We are quite proud to announce that our latest count «from the State Department of Agriculture shows the following Standard Plate count of 200 bacteria per c.c. for our raw milk. With a tolerance of 10,000 bacteria per c.c. for Grade A milk, we feel that with a count of only 200 that we really have something. Call us and order a trial quart today. Happy Thot Jersey Farm PHONE 3941 HERMISTON let him return unto the Lord, and he will have mercy upon him.” Isa. 55:7. 5E3ISTiAH ii \ NCI S N T CHURCHES AND M ODERN NFC fcro M ancy . alias m es - r.IFHICil AND HYPNOTISM. DE NOUNCED” wes the c••.'□Jest of the L s tn -S tfh ic a in all Churches of C .. S'-i'itt:'. . on Sunday, Dee. 1. The Cfc!:'.;n T r,-y. “Leek u n to me, and he ye re.vod, all the en.'.o of the er.rth: for I am G d, r.r.d thtre ;□ ;::: e dee" (Is?. 45: Amer.g the i e; '..hie'i c o n - F:i.-.:d the Ic . .en-L ;r;non was the f in g from the Bible: "B ilov- ed, teiicve re ; e .-cry spirit, but try the spirits w hether they arc of f : } «c“ ' m any faioo p.o- phels are sene cut into the world” li u ...,i 4 :.i, The Lesson-Sermon a'so included the following ccrrelative passages from the Christian Science text book, “Science end Health wiih Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy: “Christian Science goes to the bottom of mental action, and reveais the theodicy which indi cates the rightness of all divine action as the emanation of divine Mind, and the consequent wrong ness of the opposite so-called ac tion.—evil, occultism, necromancy, mesmerism, animal magnetism, hypnotism” (p. 104>. C O L U M B IA N E W S (Continued from Page One) on Mr. and Mrs. Gus Linder Tuesday afternoon. They found Mr. Linder much improved, although he is quite weak yet. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Morehouse and daughter Betty and Miss Blanche Ilai mon were guests at a turkey din ner Saturday evening at the Forrest Moore home. Mrs. Jessie Hooker took the noon train at Stanfield Wednesday for Weiser, Idaho, where she will visit until after Christmas with her son G. B. Adams and family. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Knox and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wells spent Sunday at the John Knox home. Lon “Shorty” Wilson is reported to be quite ill at his home. Mr. Clark, the Watkins man, has been calling in this district this week. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Follett and twins Kathleen and Keith were re cent dinner guests a t the Verne Dunham home. Visiting at the Baxter Hutchison home Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Cline of Pendleton, Leonard Cart- ledge of Portland, Gilbert Conner, Chief Police at Mission, and Mr. and Mrs. Jam es’Arnberg of Irrigon. Mrs. Jessie Hooker and Mr. and Mrs. Enos Burchett visited Mrs. Hooker’s brother in Walla Walla Sunday. Mrs. Bud Hooker spent the day Tuesday with her sister, Mrs. Lee Putnam in Hermiston. Mrs. Sophia Kopacz and Mrs. Jap. Templeton were Tuesday visitors at the John Jendrzejewski home. Prices arc for Dec. 6 to 9. incl. Grapefruit AR»KZ A Doz. 33ci W ar M akes B irth Decline Deaths on the battlefield are not alone responsible for the decrease in population reported at the end of every w ar. In fact, the Journal of the A m erican M edical associa tion states in a recent issue: “ Ac tual battle losses are matched by losses in future population due to reductions in the birth ra te .” The depletion of young men and the resulting disturbance of the ratio of m arriageable men and women constitute one of the most serious effects of war, the magazine says in quoting statistics showing that 72 per cent of German military deaths and 55 per cent of French m ilitary deaths during the World war were men under 30. In 1910, both Germany and France reported they had about as many men as women. After the World war, however, Germany reported an excess of 150 women per 1,000 men between 25 and 29 years, 259 per 1,000 from 30 to 34. and 181 per 1.000 from 35 to 39. For the sam e age groups, France reported an excess of women, re-' spectively, of 261, 206 and 176. The Journal says: “Some of the results, such as the great increase in the proportion of m arriages in the postwar period in which the groom was much older than the bride, were quite obvious. Another effect was the continued fall of the birth rate after the war. Clearly the actual battle losses are matched by losses in future popula tion due to reduction of the birth ra te .” Pictorial Means Pictorial menus m ay be the next refinem ent in the reataurant busi ness. One New York chain has be gun experim enting along thia line with a color photo “ glorifying” Yankee pot roast taking up more than h a lf an inside page of its menu. dozen • LEM ONS............ dozen Sunkist - Large 360’s PARSNIPS................ 3 lbs. IOC Fresh Washed SQUASH ............... - .... 5 for 1O< Danish Large Ripe CABBAGE...................... lb. Solid Green Heads Garden* side BRAND CANNED S H R IM P TUNA FLAKES CORN 2 22, 15« PEAS : U Industry BRAND CANNID 303 cans Doian Doian' S5o GULF SPRAY SM SMALL - 85« DRY PACK No. Vi can i box Chocolates ins Coffee 3£35c Pound big 12* dw ards Cqfkt lb. can 20c 2 lbs. Canterbury te a Vi-Uf. 25c lb. 4 ; Fluff-i-est MarsbtnaNous lb. box I ; Hershey Coco* \C2-lb. tin „z Cherub M ilk 4 ta ll tins 26c SILPUN RAYMAL PUMPKIN 2 Granulated Soap •4°X 29’ tou u n lits * 2 * 15c K««i. 17a 4-roll package 1 5c M IHE MEAT, ENBLISN M A IB tf I Be FAVBMTE MATCHES G b a M .ll« B M IE i MIX I X « • •M U M S SALAD DMSSMS ot 21« PARAMBC BAL PMXLES ¡inw IMiltTV. TOO COSTÌ H i t ANO 50-OI. box PEANUT BUTTER R,AtROV ____ L .« 23« WHITE MAGIC BLEACH lVi-lb. box DORTHY DUNCAN—Fancy aaaortmant ol finest quality S ZEE TISSUE KF S-os. c a n RICH MEATY FLAKES OF SELECT FISH ’MOWN SUGAR 3-lb callo I Sc CORN • BUTTER KERNEL * ; ’ i i c MTCHEN CRAFT FLOUR S Ä U M * :EN SHORTENING 41b pkg 37 0 ■’RY SHORTENING 3-lb can 46 C 10W0RIFT 3-lb can 45c l/ORY FLAKES Lga. box 20c WHITE KING GRAN. SOAP 19c CRYSTAL WHITE 5 bar. 14c Every Bedroom an Island Every bedroom in Ashford castle. Connemara, Ireland, which has just been opened as a hotel, is named after one of the islands in Lough Corrib. One bedroom is called Dringeen, another Tober, another Cleenilaun and another Illaunree. The islands themselves took their names from old legends or from events of long ago. IH«. I« * Every GnaranL' Beef Roasts Pork Roasts * Bacon By the piece *Lb- Sirloin Steak Lb Pure Lard 4 Lb- pke-