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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1942)
PAGE FOUR The Hermiston Herald Published Every Thursday at Hermiston, Umatilla County, Oregon. Alfred Quiring and Leander Quiring, Publishers. Entered at the post office at Hermiston as Second Class Matter, Dec. 1906, Umatilla County, Oregon. Subscription Rates One Year........................................... $2.00 Six Months ................................ :..... 1.00 Three Months .......................................... 50 Payable in Advance Office Telephone ............................. 2051 Residence Telephone ....................... 2333 Member ORECOGNEWS PAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Wave the Flag on the Fourth The stars and stripes will be floating Saturday on our many battlefronts around the world, and we, on this natal day, should wave an answer to the boys across the waves and the cause they are fighting for. Every home, place of business, cars going to and fro, and public places should display the emblem which has risen to its greatest glory in our history. Though we have had Pearl Harbor, Bataan and Corregidor, the Valley Forges of this war, American courage and determination to win a war has never been so strong. We are ail out to give our lives and all we have, if necessary, to keep our flag and all it stands for afloat on land, on sea and in the air. It is a symbol of heroism, of patriotism, of justice, of freedom for the individual, of our Americanism and the American way of life, and of our power to defend and protect the principles that govern us. Do not leave your flags in the closet on July 4th. Get them out and wave the old emblem of our faith. We are not celebrating with fireworks but are burn ing powder in other ways. We are not listening to eloquent speeches or witnessing parades, but we are buying bonds and gathering rubber instead. The boys are going to the front one by one and it is well that they know that their flag is waving at home when they muster in under the banner of war. Courage and patriotism gain strength by expres- sion, and Old Glory on every breeze will help stir our sentiments into the greater action that will win the war again for our democratic institutions. nr^JCiORY BUY - ' XPAHI? inty WAR (17 . Man : Bí )NDS ‘ J . STAMPS 7.8, Try. . • THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1942. THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON. OREGON. . — i I, JOHN DEERE Here’s an entirely new type of two-way plow th u ========= P************,************************** ....... there will be entertainment consisting of a display of a family album with % < • the pictures represented by local cel By Mrs. Rose Hedrick ebrities in appropriate costumes. Mr. and Mrs. John Howard stopped , Mr. and Mrs. Eugene V. Scalf an- over the week end in Echo with Mr. | nounce the arrival of a 712 pound and Mrs. Edward Liesegang. Mr. | daughter born Sunday mornng at Howard was at one time a barber in I the Hermiston General hospital. She Echo. has been named Sharon Gail Scalf. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bartholomew, Mrs. Stella Willeutt arrived from former Echo pastime proprietors, are Loa Angeles this week to spend a few now at Oakland, Calif. He is work days with her sons, Dr. Eugene C. ing as a guard at the water front Your fire insurance policy which must Willeutt of Stanfield and Dr. A. C. and she is employed in war work. Willeutt of Hermiston. Two truck loads of scrap rubber shield you from financial loss if your pro The Stanfield library acknowledges were hauled to Pendleton Friday from the gift of 11 volumes of Composers the Signal station at Echo, totaling perty is destroyed, represents security and and their music from Miss Jeanie 15,800 pounds. Contributions of rub peace of mind provided it adequately cov Taylor, student at Stanfield high ber are still coming in and as the this past year. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. I time for closing the campaign has I ers the property it is intended to insure. Taylor, her parents, may still remain been extended ten days it is expected at Walla Walla instead of Nebraska a very material addition to the scrap | Let us make an analysis of your individual as first reported. 1 pile will be made here. requirements and check them against the Miss Donna Johnson returned to Clyde R. Berry, a guard at the ord Pendleton Sunday after ‘a few days nance depot, has purchased the E. P. protection you already have........................ vist with Miss Beryl Dewing. Pearson residence property on Press- Mr. and Mrs. Ole Richey and cott street and will move into the children and Miss Lena Bowman were house soon. Walt Young, tenant of | Portland visitors over the week end. the Pearson place, moved out Tues Miss Alice Hedrick returned Mon day and will reside at Hermiston. day night from a 12-day visit in Civilian defense motion pictures Portland with her sister, Mrs. Isack- were shown at the city hall Tuesday evening through the courtesy of the son and friends. Mrs. Rose Ulrich accompanied Mr. I Pacfic Power & Light _ Co. The . . pic- j and Mrs. Edgar Hoosier to Pendle- ture illustrated the major duties of ton Sunday night for a visit before air raid wardens and other squads in F B SWAYZE. President returning to her home in Glendale, I the event of an air attack. California. Mrs. Ulrich is a sister of Exceeding the local quota by $4, Mrs. O. M. Hoosier and had been vis- the Echo USO fund solicitors closed Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation their campaign Monday and turned iting her since June.24. Mrs. Moffitt of Akron, Colo., Mrs. over $104.36 to the county committee. Ralph Barber of Colorado Springs, Mrs. A. C. Ebert was chairman of the mother and sister of Mrs. L. E. local committee. Mrs. P. J. Rohde returned Monday , Hughes, are visiting relatives here Near flood conditions along the 1 from Portland where she attended and at Hermiston. Umatilla river south of Echo result the annual conference of the Meth- Howard Evans, janitor of the F. ed from the extremely heavy rain of odist church. S. A. trailer park, visited relatives last Thursday and Friday. An inch Mr. and Mrs. Bud Springer re- in Heppner Sunday. His uncle. Mar- and a quarter of rain fell here dur turned the first of the week from a ion Evans, and Mrs. Earl Evans, ing the storm, and rush of water l few days visit in Portland. drove back to Stanfield Sunday down the east slope of the valley in Rev. and Mrs. Laurance Burdette night with him, Andrew Thomas, the neighborhood of the Joe Ramos another janitor of the trailers, will Jr. farm caused serious breaks in the of Portland are expected here the UNITED have next week off and will celebrate Furnish ditch, The ditch was broken first of the week for a visit at the in six places, a nd a week or more will country home of Mrs. Ilene Rohde. the Fourth at their home in Bend. STATES Rev. Burdette was Methodist pastor Howard Herrick of Portland is be required to repair the damage so at Echo several years ago. a convalescent at the home of his that irrigation water can be turned Rev. M. B. Ballinger announces | parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Her- into the canal, One square of alfal- rck, following an appendectomy. fa land on the Ramos place was cov- that he will hold Methodist services I with boulders and silt from a at Echo every Sunday evening at | BONDS Jeanie Nudo and Frankie Nudo, sis- ered 7:30 until other arrangements are ter and brother of Mrs. Howard Her- break. AND Among the oddities produced in the made. rick, will return to Portland with for scrap rubber is an unused Election of officers for the Echo them until after the Fourth for a search STAMPS tire which vacation. i —> — was , purchased - — in 1911 » by Ladies Aid society, which was sched- James McCarty for his Maxwell The uled for June 24, has been postponed Mr. and Mrs. Mell Harmons of is a 34x4 72 clincher type Ajax, until the first meeting in July. Six- Klamath Falls are visiting Mr. and tire Donald Pearson, son of Mr. and teen members attended the regular Mrs. Bob Tucker. Mrs. E P. Pearson, who graduated meeting at the home of Mrs. M. E. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fedler, Henry from Echo high school in May, left Meyers, Wednesday. Jr. and Darlene visited at the home Monday for Portland to enlist, prob- — .. . . 11 1 . Harold Weltzin, who has been un- of Mrs. Cap Behme Monday and ably in the air corps. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Loyd spent Sun- der the doctors care at The Dalles Tuesday upon returning from a va SMART MONEY cation in Portland to their home in day visiting friends in Echo. Mr. for several weeks returned home this Nampa, Idaho. They also visited Loyd, former grade school teacher week. His health is much improved. KNOWS Roger Jordan, who is stationed at Mrs. Gordon Wallace, a sister of Mr. here, is spending the summer on a Camp Roberts, Cal., arrived in Echo Fedler, and Mrs. Orville Kensler, a ranch in the John Day country. WHERE TO /I niece, while here. W. W. Newton of Yakima arrived Wednesday to spend a furlough vis GO AFTER 8» Mrs. Tom Colpitts underwent a Wednesday to supervise installation iting his parents Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Jordan. FADING tonsilectomy Monday at the Hermis of the new city pump. Members of Co. B state guard Mr. and Mrs. Wesley G. Combs and ton hospital. THE ADS . Mrs. Edna Fisk is convalescing at plan to observe Fourth of July with children left Friday for Idaho where “AAAcc osce r IN THIS her home on the Meadows west of a picnic dinner, possibly on the city Mr. Combs will be employed on a de- NEWSPAPER. lawn. ! tense project. Stanfield. The Harmony club will meet July 7 at the home of Mrs. Esther Seeley with Mrs. Hazel Bosquet at hostess. Mrs. Cora Coombs Olday announc es the second tea at the Presbyterian parlors in which we hope ilers will many ladies from the STANFIELD NEWS Out of Sight Out of Mind! No Obligation • Phone Today FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HERMISTON BUY WAR 2ut The cloudburst which struck the Furnish ditch June 24 just beyond the Joe Ramos farm is fast being re paired but it is expected the ditch will be without water for at least three weeks. F. A. Baker returned Monday from a visit in Portland, Forest Grove and McMinnville. Zella Simms of The Dalles and Betty Gene Gardner of Walla Walla visited Betty's grandmother, Mrs. Al ice Maskylene recently. Mrs. Frieda Flanders of San Francisco, sister of Mrs. Maskylene, and Mrs. Helen Gardner, daughter, and John of, Portland also were week end visitors. Miss Josephine Griggs of Pendle-! ton is a houseguest of Mrs. George Grant. Mrs. Ralph Bartley entertained on June 25, honoring the sixth birthday of her daughter Shirley. Two birth day cakes were cut as Mrs. Orpha Brown, a guest, had the same birth- day. Miss I.enna Ward directed in- door games as it was pouring down rain outside. Willis Pointer, former resident of Stanfield, but now a resident of Yak ima for 15 years, enjoyed hunting up old friends and noticing the late [ changes. Frank Ayres, formerly of the Hi- way Cafe, .was seen planting a lawn | this week. We hope it grows. Hei and Mrs. Ayres, after completing a circuit of Oregon cities and return- r ing through McKenzie Pass to On tario, visited Mrs. Ayers' sister and really enjoyed their vacation trip. Mrs. Berniece Benoy and Bennie have gone to their home at Payette I for an extended stay. Harold Siebel, who suffered a ver tebra injury a week ago when the Kasari car in whch he was riding was | knocked off the road by a logging [ truck, is able to return home. Rev. B. F. Mitchell will give a ser- ■ mon on July S, “Christ's Best ” He will leave for a week's vacation at Seattle and also attend the Synod at Centralia. The motion picture with instruc tions to air raid wardens shown on i Monday night at the high school was witnessed by probably 75 people. We’re for You, Pal Keep that Flag Flying! This war be* longs to all of us-to fight, to finance, to fin ish. Let’s do it together. Here’s how we can help— ON SATURDAY, JULY 4TH EVERY DIME WE TAKE IN FROM 12:00 NOON TO 6:00 P. M., WILL GO INTO DEFENSE BONDS zi a • We plan to make this a monthly feature! ======== —Ea all times even when opening lands If« new in design new in features you’ll like s.. $ -check its many fine features at our store ves . want a new John Deere No. 32 twö-furmw You ! ay 1 ractor Plow on your farm this year.’ BRADEN BELL TRACTOR & EQUIPMENT CO. Pendleton JOHN DEERE Phone 518 ECHO NEWS ITEMS M. A. Parker, who was superin-II tendent of Echo schools the past I year, is now employed by the Ameri- I can Aluminum company at Vancou- I ver. Wash He is in the personnel I division. I Vernon Smith, son of Mr and Mrs. I Roy Smith of Echo, was graduated I from the officers training school at I Fort Sill. Oklahoma, Tuesday and is 1 now a second lieutenant in the field I artillery. Smith enlisted in Septem- I ber. 1940. I Echo Rebekah lodge is staging a l "hobo dinner" at the Odd Fellows I hall Thursday evening, July 2. As parade will precede the feed and • WATCH THIS PAPER FOR FUTURE DATES. Hale’s Confectionery & Sporting Goods HERMISTON, OREGON