Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, June 21, 1945, Page 7, Image 7

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    fight with our sleeves rolled up and our shoulders
to' the wheel. The war will go on. If Uncle Sam
can't borrow our dollars he can tax them out of us.
Make it easier for him by loaning him your money.
Heppnr Gazette Times, June 21 , 1945 7
Oregon lost a valuable citizen in the passing of
of Mac Hoke. While never seeking political office,
he contriuted far more than the average public of
ficial to the welfare of the state. He devoted his
exceptional talents to the. upbuilding of agricul
ture and was identified with the leadership in nu
merous branches o farm life, not only in the state,
but nationally as well. His loss will be keenly fell
in those organizations to which he devoted mucb
of his time and to the host of friends who deeply
regret his passing in the prime of life.
UNION MISSIONARY MEETING
The summer meeting of the local
union missionary society will be
held at the Christian church, Fri
day. 2:30 p. m. June 29. Members
and friends are urged to be present.
ATTEND CEREMONIAL
Several Hefppner people drove to
Portland Friday to attend the
Shrine ceremonial in which a large
class of candidates was initiated.
Among those going from here were
Mayor and Mrs. J. O. Turner, Mr.
and Mrs. M. D. Clark. Mr. and Mrs.
Blaine Isom, Mr. and Mrs. James
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Ander
son, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Worden
and Terrell Benge. There were
487 candidates in the class.
Mrs. Ruth .McNeil of Pendleton
spent Father's day with her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Cowins.
; ' ,';;
4
1 fV-r-l
f ' i- Procior and daughter,
Et .;ecca Ann, Port Arthur, Texas,
in happy reunion. A bomber pilot,
Lt. Proctor was shot down over
Germany and returned to this
country aboard the Gripsholm. He
Is providing for her future with
War Bonds.
. lit -v: a wot jf;p A( t r v"i
l...r llf I
ill WK'"'7vxi
SSgt. Floyd M. Chadwick, Chick- ' TSgt. Len J. Hudgeons, San An-
asha, Okla., displays flag captured tonio, Texas, whose left leg became
during fighting in Italy, as he re- paralyzed by sniper's bullets, lay
covers from wounds. "I think all 14 days on battlefield and was then
the boys in my outfit bought taken prisoner by Germans, phones
bonds," be said recently. "We will his wife that he bought War Bonds
have substantial nest-eggs when while on "the sidelines."
this war is over." v
Pvt. W. H. Edwards, Hayti, Mo.,
glad he can still buy War Bonds
for wife and six children while
awaiting artificial leg. lie lost his
leg in European action. Nazi wired
him as a booby trap and he lay
70 hours on field.
T4 James G. Kahlo, Los An
geles, Calif., wounded in Luxem
bourg, and transferred to McClos
key Hospital, wears gray beard as
evidence of his hardships. "There
Is no better investment than War
Bonds," he says. v
V. S. Trtamry DHrtouwl
ME
I
s
O YOU REMEMBER THAT DATE? It marks an
event of interest and significance to every customer of
Pacinc Power & Light Company.
It was the day this Company was incorporated, the
day it officially began a development program which
has contributed tremendously to the electrical prog
ress of this region in the past 35 years !
On June 16, 1910, the scattered electric plants and
lines forming the nucleus of the Company's system
served fewer than 7,500 customers. Today, more than
76,000 homes, farms, businesses and industries in 21
Washington and Oregon counties receive low-cost,
modern electric service from PI'&L.
In 1910 only a handful of farms in the entire Pacific
Northwest had as much as bare electric lights. Today,
Pacific Power & Light Company alone serves more
than 13,000 of the nearly 100,000 electrified f urms in
Washington and Oregon.
When this Company started business 35 years ago,
It had only 388 miles of pole lines. Today, it operates
4,600 miles of lines enough to reach from As to via
to New York, and halfway back again.
On June 16, 1910, 59 communities in the Com
pany's present service area had no electric service
whatever. Perhaps a score of others had electricity
only from dusk to midnight. Today, all of these com
munities have 24-hour-a-day electric service !
In 1910, it was commonplace for isolated little
power systems to get 10, 15, or even as much as 25
cents a kilowatt-hour for the output of their uncertain
dynamos. Today, PP&L receives an average price of
only 1.88 cents a kilowatt-hour for residential service.
Thirty-five years ago, electric cooking was a new
fangled novelty, electric refrigerators were unknown,
radio was only the "buzz-buzz" of Marconi's "wire
less." Today, thanks to American business enterprise,
thousands of homes on the PP&L system enjoy the use
of electric ranges, automatic electric water heaters,
electric refrigerators, washers, ironers, vacuum clean
ers, and scores of other modern electrical comforts
and conveniences all for a few cents a day!
Yes, the 35 years from June 16, 1910, to June 16,
1945, have been years of swift, far-reaching progress
And the same road )"' on to aver-new horizons!
Pacific Power & Light Company
1910 - Your Business -Managed Power Syr tern - 1945