j-feppner Gazette Times, May 24, 1945 7 Method to Combat Cutworms Given Cutworms are staging a heavy counter attack on the vegetables and flower garden fronts accord ing to reports filtering into the county agent's office. The cold, damp weather has been ideal for cutworms and as a result many beans, cabbages and tomato plants have become casualties.. These in. sects normally feed at night, cut ting off the younger plants near the surface of the ground and climbing up and feeding on the foliage of the older plants. Their appetites are such that almost all vegetable plants and flowers are subject tto their attacks. Poison bran mash is the most ef fective defensive weapon the gar dener can employ, and it also works on earwigs too. The following for mula will make enough for about one-third of an acre: Coarse bran, five pounds; sodium fluosilicate, one pint; water to make a crumbly mash two orthree quarts. The dry ingredients are first thoroughly mixed and the water and molasses added. Use just enough water so it will be wet but still fall apart readily after being pressed together in the hands. This poisoned bait is broadcast over the garden as soon as the first cutworm' damage is noticed. Put the bait out in the evening as the cutworms feed at night. Bond Premiere . . . air borne unit. He was . seriously wounded by a German 88 which broke his left leg and arm and set fire to four tank bombs which he had in his left hip pocket. As a re sult his leg and arm are both par tially paralyzed. His talk was most interesting. He divided it into three sections, describing Italy, personal experiences and an appeal to con tinue buying bonds. Sgt. Willie Woolridge wss enthu siastically received in his group of baritone solos. The sergeant, a na tive of San Diego freely admits there is no place like his own state, Oregon and Washington do have their good points but merely tolerates the rest of the U. S. A. He is a mess sergeant with four and one half years army experi ence, all in this country. His unit was about ready for overseas when he was injured in a jeep accident in Tennessee, from wh'ch he suf fered a skull injury, as well as a broken jaw and the loss of some teeth. He expects a medical dis charge shortly and after visiting his mother in San Diego will go on to New York where he will do ra dio work, n which the young negro was engaged when he entered the service. He should do well in his work. He is a born entertainer, a trained musician and a college graduate. The program closed with commu nity singing in which the audience participated. Mrs. O. G. Crawford directed and Mrs. J. O. Turner did all of the accompanying for the evening. Notice to Patrons Due to a shortage of help, we find it necessary to discon tinue our specal Sunday dinners. We hope to resume them at an early. Watch this space for particulars. In the meantime, we will specialize on Salads and Sandwiches On Sunday VICTORY CAFE Roy and 'Beity Lieuallen Proprietprs IONE, OREGON .-....v.v - .;: ::,t1.'. w.v.n v-:.-5".-:.; "PPM electricity is the best bargain in my household budget" ...says Mrs. Homer II. Hayes, Housewife of Joseph, Oregon "We've used PP&L electric service, first on our farm and now in our home in town for nearly twenty years ever since we moved from our Imnaha cattle ranch back to the Wallowa Valley. "I'll never forget how pleasantly surprised I was when we bought our first electric range and dis covered how little it cost to cook with electricity. Since then we've added almost every electrical convenience you can use in a home . . . and yet our electric bill is just about the smallest item of household expense. "One of the things I like best about PP&L is the extra service they give. For instance, when we bought the range, a PP&L representative came out to show me how to get the most out of it for the least cost. And from time to time they've gone over my electric bills to make sure I'm getting my money's worth for the few pennies a day I spend for electric service. "PP&L electricity it to cheap, it't the best bar gain in my household budget." Mm. Homer H. Hayes ii the daughter of a Wallow County pioneer, Daniel W. Warnock, who claimed one of the valley's first homesteads nearly 70 years ago. After her marriage to Mr. Hayes, she went with her husband t a remote section of the Snake River Canyon to establish a cattle ranch. Lumber for the Hayes home was made into a raft at Pittsburgh Landing and floated 20 miles down the swift waters of the Snake to reach the site of their ranch home. Travel in and out of the Snake River Canyon was a two day trip by horseback, and Mr. and Mrs. Hayes with their two young sons made excursions about twice a year into the Wallowa Valley for supplies. Nearly twenty years ago Mr. and Mrs. Hayes sold their Snake River holdings and purchased a 200-acre farm near Joseph, Oregon. This farm, well-electrified and lonj served by PP&L lines, is now operated by Mr. and Mrs, Hayes' son, Kirk. The other son, Corporal Max Hayes, i serving in the Army. Mrs. Hayes has her war job, too. When the Wallowa Valley ranchers needed someone to receive livestock at their Joseph shipping point, Mis. Hayes, who once rod for cattle on the Imnaha ranch, volunteered for the job. And now each Friday finds her at the Joseph stockyards, supervising the weighing in of cattle and other livestock shipped from the Valley to the outside markets. 35 YEARS OF. ELECTRICAL PROGRESS 1910 Mazda lamp re places carbon bulb, giving more light per kwh. PP&L gives you more kwh per dollar. 1920 Electric cook ingbeing popularized by Pacific Power & Light. Electric water heating era on way. 1930 Whole electric industry promotes food saving, health protection, with elec trical refrigeration. 1940 Development of fluorescent lighting offers new opportun ities for "Better Light-Better Sight". I Television ready for postwar homes. Great advances ia science of electronic! await peacetime use. PACIFIC POWER & LIGHT COMPANY Your Business-Managed Power System f O .J H Ml 6 4 f i ".V. VJTiIfB O i ' '"'1VmhnWirt,.m,m, i i I