The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, October 24, 1940, Page 3, Image 3

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    NATURALLY,
Happy T h o t
Jersey F arm
M ilk Is B etter!
It’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
•4
I redecorated cottage vacated by Carl
’ Rheas. Mr. Ogren is the new educa-
' tionai director.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Sherry have
j moved into the Cap Behme cottage on
the highway.
Kenneth Waid, who recently re-,
turned from Alaska, and Miss Lenna
Waid went to the mountains for deer
last week end. Meanwhile, they vis­
ited their sister, Mrs. Frank White,
at Hidaway Springs.
Miss Frances Clinton will show pic­
tures of her travels during the past
year and talk on tropical tropics at
te church meeting Friday, October
25, for the Stanfield-Echo unit of the
Home Demonstration group.
The Ladies Aid Sewing club met
with Mrs. Greathouse Tuesday. They
cut out aprons for the bazaar and
stamping tea towels.
George Sale Jr. has joined the ar­
my air corps and has been assigned
to March Field, Calif. Allen Black, a
CCC enrolee, also enrolled at the same
time and was accepted. Tom McCor­
mick is a recent enrollee in the U. S.
army
Mrs. Velma Tenney began serving
a varied one-dish hot lunch to school
children Monday.
Bob Refvem, student at O. S. C.,
spent the week end here at his par­
ents’ home.
tend the Ford-Ferguson ploughing
contest there.
The Pollyanne club met on Wed­
By Mrs. Bernice Wattenburger
nesday at the home of Mrs. Adolph
By Mrs. Rose Hedrick
Heyden.
Those attending the pioneer re­
Hon. Walter Pierce M. C. and Mrs.
Mrs. Gordon Manion and Patsy Pierce visited for a short time with union in Lexington Saturday were
Gale left Thursday for their home in Margaret Daugherty, the local post­ Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neill, Mr. and Mrs.
Lon Wattenburger, Mrs. C. H. Bar­
Portland after a 10-day visit at the mistress, on Tuesday.
home of her aunt, Mrs. Grace Rog­
Major and Mrs. Stolz and daugh­ tholomew and Mrs. Peggy Thompson.
Mrs. Ollie Neill and daughter. Miss
ter arrived in Stanfield this week. He
ers.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Hickman of is the new commanding officer at the Neva Neill, teacher of the primary
grade school in Heppner, spent the
Pennsylvania are the guests of Mr. C.S.C. camp.
and Mrs. Nathan Bard and John
The Home Economics club met last week end with Mr. and Mrs. A. E.
Hickman, a brother, whom he had not Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Roy At- Wattenburger.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Finch and
seen for 19 years. They had been on tebury. The crocheted ecru bedspread
a business trip to Seattle and Port­ just completed by the Stanfield and family spent Sunday with Mr. and
Echo Grange is on dsplay at the M. Mrs. Ed Hughes of Lena.
land.
Robert McGreer spent the past
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Baker and Refvem store.
Mrs. Powell, mother of Mrs. Baker,
The booster night meeting of the week in Pendleton. He returned
were at the F. A. Baker home Satur­ Grange was attended by about fifty j home Sunday.
Mrs. John Harrison and son John­
The meeting began with
day. They were en route to San people.
the song, “God. Bless America.” Two ny left Sunday for her new home in
Francisco.
Mrs. Sylvanus Smith went to No­ skits were given by some high school Eugene. She was given a beautiful
va Scotia recently where she was girls. Joe Meyers, master, gave a wel­ chinille bed spread and floor mat for
called by the serious illness of her fa­ come talk and M. E. Knickerbocker a gift from her friends on Butter
ther who has reached advanced showed pictures of bird life and var­ Creek, Echo and Hermiston, and
ious experiments. Doughnuts and cof­ Johnny received a nice overnight
years.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Gillanders fee were served by Mrs. Tillory and suitcase. All friends of Mrs. Harri­
returned Monday from hunting deer. Mrs. Attebury.
son will miss her good jolly face from
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Ogren of Camp our community.
Leo Rueber made a business trip
to Spokane, Wn., last Tuesday to at­ Mill City have located in the recently
Mrs. John Healy underwent an op­
eration in Heppner Saturday. At this
writing she is improving.
Lloyd Baldridge called Sunday at
the Roy Neill and E. B. Wattenbur­
ger home.
John McCauley left Monday for
his new job in Klamath Falls. He
has been at the Boylen ranch the past
six or eight years.
Art Thompson took charge of the
things at the Boylen ranch Monday,
taking Mr. McCauley’s place.
Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Wattenburger
3 BUSES DAILY TO
and Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Ayers
PORTLAND $3.60
called Sunday at the Bill Phillips
home.
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Green and
daughter Mary of Echo spent Mon­
day afternoon at the E. B. Watten­
. b i d » « 1'« “ " '“
“
burger home.
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Bartholomew j
are building a new two room house
on their farm for a cook house in the
winter time.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Moore spent
Friday evening in Hermiston.
SEATTLE - $610
CORVALLIS $835
(Too late for last week)
EUGENE - - $5 85
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wattenburger
5SAN FRAN. $900
spent from Wednesday till Sunday in
Long Creek with the Buseick family.
HERMISTON
Burl Wattenburger and Clayton
Ayers spent Saturday in the John
DRUG. CO.
Day country.
Phone 2271
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. McGreer and
Hermiston,
daughter Shirley and Bobby Groun-
Oregon
wold and Mrs. Goldia Newcome left
Sunday for Redmond on business.
PINE CITY NEWS
STANFIELD NEWS
*
PACE
THE HERMISTON HERALD. HERMISTON. OREGON.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 19«0.
Mrs. Beulah Helms of Spokane
called Sunday on the creek and visit-
id the Joe Folley home.
Mrs. Heler. Ringo and Miss Marie
Klages left Friday for Enterprise and
Joseph. On Monday and Tuesday
they plan to take in the teachers’ in­
stitute in La Grande.
SCHOOL EDITORS TO
GATHER AT U. OF O.
professor of journalism; and several
others.
Feature of the conference will be
the annual banquet Friday evening,
at which a number of special enter­
tainment numbers will be presented.
Robert Hiatt, Portland, president
■ of the conference will preside. Other
officers are: Betty Xleger, Astoria,
vice president, and Virginia Hoff
man, McMinnville, secretary.
High school newspaper editors and
managers, faculty advisers and stu­
dents in charge of annuals and other,
publications from all parts of the
state will gather in record numbers
at the University of Oregon October
25 and 26 for the annual high school
press conference. Among those who
will attend from Umatilla county are:
Phylis Sires and Bill Belt of Her­
miston: Jean Potter, June Kirkpat­
rick, Ray Peterson and Miss Flor­
ence Sweet of Pendleton.
Meetings this year will be devoted
largely to discussions of actual prob­
lems facing the high school journal­
ist. A number of the sessions will
include talks and demonstrations by
working high school editors, it is an­
nounced.
On the program for talks will be
Eric W. Allen, dean of the school of
journalism; Palmer Hoyt, publisher
of The Oregonian; Professor Hulten;
Lyle M. Nelson, Eugene, editor of
the Emerald, university daily; W. J.
Mischler, Eugene; Donald Ross,
Prineville; Helen Angell, Salem, as- J
sociate editor, the Emerald; Vivienne [
Vosper, Jefferson high school, Port­
land; Harry Johnson, editor, Eugene j
High School News; George Turnbull,
Shut off from trade and travel in
Europe, Middlewesterners. are turn­
ing their attention in an am arng
degree to Latin-American countries,
to a study of their culture, art, and
background, and to the prospects
for travel, and even indefinite stays,
according to findings of the Pan
American council here.
The council, which established
headquarters in Chicago, has been
deluged with inquiries of all kinds,
declared the president, Mrs. Robert
S. Platt.
People are asking about travel,
about the advisability of moving to
some South American country to
make greater use of technical train­
ing in dairying, metallurgy, or man­
ufacture, about Latin-American art
or music, or politics, about lecturers
and speakers who can give an eve­
ning’s program, about crafts, tex­
tiles, and paintings they might ex­
hibit, about music and literature.
The council is not only a clearing
BUYER MEETS
CCI
I CD IN OUR A0
O I-LLC.lv
„ 3U. , A-.., .COLUMNS,...
.
r-
W k io k Qtv—d.
PURER MILK AT
M V LESS PER QT.
house for Latin-American informa-1
tion for Chicagoans, Mrs. Platt em-i
phasized, but also a kind of focal
point for about eight Latin-Ameri­
can organizations, including the
Friends of Mexico, Institute de las
Espanas, Mesa Espanola, Good
Neighbor Forums of the Y, M. C. A.
college, and Spanish clubs in North­
western university and the Univer­
sity of Chicago.
Letters and telephone calls ask,
‘Can you give us the name of an
importer of rubber in South Amer­
ica?” ‘ Does Germany or Uruguay
control the salvage rights of the Ad­
miral Graf Spec?” “Which country
has that large public works pro­
gram pending?” “How much Amer­
ican money was invested in Latin-
American countries in 1939?”
To assist in disseminating infor­
mat m the council, young as it is,
is already putting out a bi-monthly
bulletin announcing a calendar of
film i rowings, orchestra concerts,
panel discussions, exhibits, lan­
guage classes and other scheduled
events all having to do with Latin-
Americ. n relations.
CONGRESS
Lillian Gish, Dancer,
Started With Bernhardt
AFTER
ELLIS
REPUBLICAN
WHO HE IS — Born in Iow a, January
12, 1893. R esid en t o f O regon ain ce 1919.
M arried and haa tw o children. S erving
2nd 4-yr. term in Oregon S ta te Senate.
HIS RECORD — Introduced b ill w hich
raised price of w h isk ey to a id O ld A ge
P en sio n s. Sponsored truck b ill g iv in g
farm ers right to haul neigh b or’s p ro ­
duce to m arket. Backed $90,000 fund
for 4-H Club work. Introduced b ill
a b o lish in g pauper’s oath.
WHAT HE STANDS F O R - S u p p o r t
o f the D ie s C om m ittee. D ep ortation of
H arry B rid g es. P rotection from Foreign
Im ports o f C attle. Sheep. W ool, Lum ­
ber and A L L D a iry and A gricultural
Products. A square deal for O regon’»
Sugar Industry. E xpansion o f the Rural
E lectrifica tio n Program . More m oney
for the A ged o f our Land.
Durinq the b years
under M ilt Las the
lo n u m rh a ip a id a n
aeemqe o f tt.tjta e r
fu o r i ( l i t jarinq) o f
shich tha Produrre
h o i e tc e in d d i d l
s tile infronnq quaKf
f a f O f S A flU s U t i f
------- f -
VOTE 3 1 7 NO!
Lillian Gish—dancer.
That would be surprising billing,
indeed, for the actress who has long
been accounted an international dra-
, matic star of stage and screen.
Yet it was as a dancer that the
fragile beauty made her debut on
Broadway. And with Sarah Bern­
hardt, at that.
Miss Gish was but seven at tha
time, and Sarah was well past 60,
though tall and striking in appear­
ance.
“How thrilled I was,” Miss Gish
recalls.
“ Bernhardt selected me for the
part of the child dancer after visit­
ing a dancing school I attended.
“ Each night as she stood in the
wings, preparing to make her en­
trance, Bernhardt would pat me on
the head. It became quite a little
rite between us, and I thought of it
suddenly the other night for the first
time in years when I found myself
patting little Harlan Stone on the
head as we stood in the wings be­
fore the first act curtain of ‘Life
With Father.’ ”
i
Vote 15 X-ELLIS
for R ep resen tative ¡a Conpreet
S e c e n d D istrict
This adv. paid for by the Republican State Central
Committee. Kern Crandall, Chm., Portland, Orc
Looking Back to Kitty Hawk
Whether Orville and Wilbur j
Wright, who realized Roger Bacon’s
prophecy and Leonardo da Vinci’s]
dream, ever foresaw the sky fulU
of Messerschmitts, Heinkels, Spit­
fires, Airacobras and the like—is a
question that some expert in the short
history of aviation may answer if he
can. If they did the world today j
possibly wishes they had folded their
tents at Kitty Hawk and bicycled
back to Dayton before 10 o'clock on
the morning of December 17, 1903.
Be that as it may, it is certain
that they did not foresee an ency­
clopedia of the airplane of more
than 1,400 pages less than 37 years
after their world-shaking (light. Yet
here it is this day, an item at least
half as bulky as an unabridged dic­
tionary, and named “Aerosphere:
1939.” The author and editor is
Glen D. Angle of Detroit, who is
known as an engine designer and
ns the author of various books and
many technical articles relating to
airplane engines. He was formerly
a professor at the Lawrence Insti­
tute of Technology, and is now con­
nected with the Briggs Manufactur­
ing company.
oJ QletftMi M ilh ïla u r!
W . Ade. C. W. J e u M , $♦«>., O ~ « e e
MWfc Prodeaera, HT Oeegee Wldg., PeH iee/
TO «SK n u . ..
‘ You serve 1 2 ,0 0 0
farms?
Z
Everyone knows (hat it takes more
poles and w ire to serve scattered
farms than it does to deliver elec­
tricity in a city where you have a
customer every 50 feet o r so. I ’d
lik e to know bow you manage to
make ends meet when so much of
your business is spread out thin?"
"Y o u ’v e paid
* 1 0 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 taxes?
I ’ve heard that Pacific Power &
Light Company has paid more than
$10,000,000 in taxes since 1910.
H o w can you do (his and still have
rates that compare favorably w ith
a whole lot o f tax-free public
power systems?”
AMSWSK I S . . . a w e ll-b a la n c e d , efficient system!
. . . run by an up-and-coming organization I ’m proud to
belong to. I t ’s true that Pacific Power & Light Company
operates mostly in small towns and nut in the country,
and that it carries a whale o f a big tax load. But you see,
our system is like a diversified farm. W e serve a lot of
different types o f electric users, and a variety of sea­
sonal business, in 21 different counties in W ashington
and Oregon. That means pretty steady sales o f elec­
tricity the year ’round fo r the s>stem as a whole, even
though it’s up and down in any one locality.
"A nother thing, our Company has a big enough bud-
30 YEARS OF PUBLIC SERVICE
á
IB
Flood of Questions Asked
About South America
Hfew got sotte questions
{
.T in
"And y e t your rates
a re 37% below
national a v e ra g e ? *
Big League Games Indoors
Huge sports stadia of the future
in which major league baseball
teams will play under roofs and with
indirect lighting, rain or shine, are
predicted by Robert J. Swackham-
er, G-E engineer.
Such stadia
might be built in the next 10 or 15
years, he believes.
Admitting that the idea seems
radical, Mr. Swackhamer points out
that baseball was scoffed at in the
early stages of its development at
Lynn, Mass., but now night baseball
is being played by 75 per cent of the
clubs in organized baseball. Swack­
hamer, who designed the lighting
for the fields of the Cincinnati Reds,
Brooklyn Dodgers, and Cleveland
Indians, recalled how his proposal
of night ball in the majors was rid­
iculed at one time.
ness to keep a competent and experienced staff o f fu ll­
tim e engineers and managers busy a ll the time, and yet
it’s not too big to take a personal interest in your par­
ticular problems. Also, w e’ve got the kind of a m arket­
ing organization that keeps building up electricity sales
so we can keep reducing the cost o f each kilow att-
hour to you.
" W h a t it boils down to is this: Pacific Power A Light
Company does an all-around good job at low-cost
because it’s a successful American enterprise. And in this
country, business success means giving the consumer
R E A L V A L U E for every do llar.”
PACIFIC POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
The indirect illumination of such
stadia probably would be accom­
plished by projecting the light, from
concealed locations below the roof,
to the celling of the stadium where
it would be reflected downward to
H m playing and seating areas.
I