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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1943)
OASIS THEATRE Fri.-Sat. asin WOK June 25-26 Sun.-Mon. June 27-28 PIDGEOn in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer * WHITE CARCO FASHION NOTE LOCALS Mrs. H. B. Parrent left Wednesday for an indefinite visit with her mo ther in Lucille, Idaho. Gordon Stuart and son Dee of Ba ker were visitors Friday afternoon and over night at the home of his par ents, Rev. and Mrs. Stuart. Dr. J. P. Stewart, Eye-Sight Spec ialist of Pendleton will be at the Her miston Hotel on Wednesday, June 30. adv. Hours 1 00 to 5:00 p, m. LaVerna Colpitts left Wednesday for her home in North Powder after spending some time here visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Nora Colpitts. Mrs. F. B. Swayze left late Wed nesday for Caldwell, Kansas, to spend approximately a month visiting at the home of her mother. Mrs. Leatha Boyd and daughter Carolee who have been here visiting her parents and brothers and sister, returned to their home at Bend last Friday. FRANK MORGAN REGINALD RICHARD SELL WAR CARLSON • BONOS OWEN ) s..0 A. “And, behold, I come quickly; and my re ward is with me, to give every man ac cording as his work shall be. Blessed are they that do his com mandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.” June 29 Tuesday ANN MILLER BOB CROSBY gdkë FREDDIE SLACK andai with ELLA MAE MORSE ° DUKE ELLINGTON ÄA COUNT BASIE 0JÍ FRANK SINATRA MILLS BROTHERS THE RADIO ROGUES OSELLE I EVeRLy WITH HERMISTON BAPTIST CHURCH with Wm. Wright. Dick Purcell H. V. McGee, Pastor Wednesday and Thursday June 30 - July 1 Hermiston Barber Shop ÄSODET WELL EQUIPPED TO ACCOMMODATE AND GIVE YOU THE BEST OF SERVICE Presented by Arnold Pressburger BILL SHAAR, Prop. s.. NG BRIAN DONLEVY Hermiston Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carson and Lena Baehne returned last Thursday from a week’s trip to visit Mrs- Glen Mikesell at Vallejo,. Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carson have received word from their son, PFC Don Baehne, that he has arrived safely at his destination. His boat left from Seattle. Mrs. C K. Garrison of Wood Riv- er, Neb., is spending the summer months in Hermiston at the home of her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Kent Garrison. Clarence Kennison and Lyle Tilden, who recently left for service with the Merchant Marines, have written rel atives that they are- stationed at Brooklyn, New York, for the present. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Logan and Kay and Virgil returned from Portland Sunday where Mr. Logan attended a postmasters convention. Mr. Logan is on vacation from the Hermiston of fice. Whitley W. Ewing of Hermiston has been accepted by the U. S. Marine Corps and was recently inducted at Spokane. Wash. ' He is a graduate of Hermiston high school where he play ed basketball and football. Clifford S. Parrent. Field Artillery, Camp Barkley, Texas, and Herbert R. Parrent, a welder in the Tacoma ship yards, arrived Saturday to spend un til Wednesdav visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Parrent. Carl Ball, Seaman Second Class, came Friday to visit until Saturday of this week here with his .parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Ball. Carl has been in the service about two months and is now stationed at Camp Farra- gut. Raymond Hollomon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Preston Hollomon, has recently finished primary flight training in California and has been sent to Cor pus Christi, Texas, for advanced training. Raymond is a graduate of Hermiston high school. Miss Dorothy Ferguson of Portland but formerly of Hermiston came Tues day to spend a week here visiting friends. Miss Ferguson is connected with Berg’s Beauty Salon in Portland and formerly owned her own shop ir Hermiston. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Warner and daughter. Mrs. E. P. Schofield and children Edward and Patricia, spent Monday in Pendleton. Mrs. Schofield returned to her home in Vancouver Wednesdav but the Schofield children remained for a longer visit with their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. George McKenzie and children of Tillamook spent the week end in Hermiston with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. McKenzie and Mr. and Mn. .1. G. Pearson. Mr. and Mrs. McKenzie returned the first of the week but the children remained for a longer visit. $ + $ • pot Csao /Moneif! $ TABLE QUEEN JEL-SERT SALAD DRESSING $ : > 6 Delicious Flavors PKGS. 40 QUART JAR NANETTE DUPRE DIAMOND CLEANSING TISSUE WAX PAPER 500 SHEETS 239 125 FOOT ROLL (Cooks in 7 minutes) PER PACKAGE 2 "c GIANT SIZE 278 RADISHES 10 Pkgs. - 6 Cere ALL FOR X 24$ Bennie Evans, Aviation Metalsmith 2/c, returned last month to the U. S. after more than a year’s service over- seas. Mrs. Evans went to San Fran cisco and returned with him to Her miston Monday where Mr. Evans will visit relatives and friends during part of his 20 day furlough. He will report again July 3 at San Francisco. ^Just receive’ WATCHES Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knerr are the parents of a seven pound boy born last Friday at the Hermiston General hospital. The little fellow has been named Paul Richard. Mr. Knerr, who is stationed with the Coast Guard at Sixes, Oregon, received an eight-day furlough so that he might visit his wife and new son. Bernie Corpe. son of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Corpe, formerly of Hermiston, is spending this week in Hermiston. He will report soon for service with the U. S. Navy. Bernie formerly at tended school here. His brother Bill is now stationed somewhere in Eng- land. Arne Wahl of Astoria spent from last Friday until Sunday here at the home of his daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Monte Hedwall. Mr. Wahl is a boat builder by trade and had gone to Portland for some treatments. Mr. Hedwall is still employed in Port land, recently spending a short vaca tion at home. CARROTS BLEACH GALLON RAVIOLI 278 NEW 239 APPLE JUICE OZ. BOTTLE 249 CRYSTAL WHITE SOAP LETTUCE Large Crisp Heads EACH WEST BEETS BUNCHES COFFEE BARS LB. JAR $ 100 PEAS LBS. 210 C-H-B Fresh Cucumber STARCH CHIPS Corn or Gloss 21-OZ. JAR 40 PREFERRED SODA WAFERS LB BOX •»« PRUNES CAN 186 Hermiston Food Store Your Certified Independent Phone 3781 HERMISTON. OREGON 21 jewels DOLLY , MADISON 21 jewels $4950 $4950 RESIDENT sODDESS of TIME 17 jewels $3750 Due to the great amount of precision materiel which the Bulova Watch Company is W.Behrman Jewelry Store watches We suggest you Open Evenings WOOD FIRE CALLS OUT DEPARTMENT Just by the way of something dif ferent, the fire siren sounded Thurs day afternoon. A wood pile belong ing to the Inland Cooperative had caught fire. The damage was slight but was indicative of the dryness of outside materials and caution necess ary during the next few months. This was the first alarm in some weeks. CENTRAL CHVRCH OF CHRIST C. Warner. Pastor The sermon topic for Sunday morn ing will be “The Characteristics of the Blood of Christ”, and Sunday evening, “The Challenge of a Christ ian Life.” NAVY ANNOUNCES NEW ENLISTMENT The Navy today announced a re- opening of opportunities for 17-year- olds and men above the draft age to enlist with petty officer ratings in more than forty classifications of na val service. At the same time, the Navy again is permitting the enlistment of men 38 to 50 with previous service in the regular Navy or Coast Guard at the rating they held at the time of dis charge. Lieut. George O. Hackett, officer in charge of the ten Navy recruiting stations in Eastern Washington. Ore gon and the Idaho Panhandle, said that this is the first time since Dec ember 5, 1942, when all voluntary en listment was temporarily halted, that enlistees can enter the service with petty officer ratings. Immediate rat ings were granted only in special in stances and in the Navy’s Seabee ranks. Listen to Morgenthau-Marshall Tell Power of Payroll Savings! Washington, D. C.—How important is the average worker’s war bond purchases out of his pay every payday in the grand strategy of the Allied High Command7 Does the extent of his or her War Bond allotment have a part in determining when, where and the strength of our military blows? Any worker listening in on a recent con versation between General George C. Marshall, President Roosevelt’s Chief of Staff, and Secre- tary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr., learned the answers to these questions. Said General Marshall: “Mr. Secretary, I want you to answer a question for me and to answer it with complete George C. Marshall frankness. Can we military leaders plan to fight this war in an orderly way—in the surest and most effective man ner—or must we take extraordinary risks for fear the money will not hold out?” Replied Secretary Morgenthau: “General, the American public will take care of that. What they have done in the Second War Loan drive—the money they have produced and the spirit they have shown—is proof enough for me that they will not let our fighters suffer from lack of support until we achieve complete victory, no matter how long that may be nor how much it may cost.” Henry Up your War Bond allotment out of your Morgenthau, Jr. wages today. Figure it out for yourself how much above 10 per cent it should be. U. S. Treasury Department Yes, Ma’m, we are wholesal- er 3 of Grade A pasteurized Milk and Cream 6675 the Universe, including Man, Evolved by Atomic Force? ’ was the subject of the Lesson-: ermon in a.l Churches of Chri 1, Scienist, on Sunday, June 2 J. The Golden Text was, “To us there is but one God, the Father, of whom are a.l things, and we in him" (I Cor. 6:3). Among the citations which comprised the LeSiOn-Sermon was the following from tile Bible: “And as he went out of the temple, one of his disciples saith unto him, Master, see what man ner of stones and what buildings are here! And Jesus answering said unto him . . . there shall not be left one stone upon another, that shall not be thrown down. Heaven and earth shall pass away: but my words shall not pass away” (Mark 13:1,2,31). The Lesson-Sermon also in cluded the following correlative passages from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scrip tures" by Mary Baker Eddy: "Tne true theory of the universe, in cluding man, is not in material history but in spiritual develop ment. Inspired thought relin quishes a material, sensual, and mortal theory of the universe, and adop.s the spiritual and immort al” (p.547). 1 BUNCHES \ ALERIO 12 OZ. JAR 56 NEUES NU BORA POST TOASTIES D $ Mrs. Dun Serell came last Saturday to visit for 10 days with her husband who left from Pendleton, Tuesday night for the armed forces, He ex- pects to return shortly for approxi- mately a week’s furlough prior to en tering actual service. Mrs. Serell has taught school in Salem the past year. FRESH LOCAL VARIETY TENDERONI - PRODUCE 179 $ $ THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1943. THE HERMISTON HERALD. HERMISTON. OREGON. page two Grocer Buttermilk • Cottage Cheese These dairy products are not rationed and can be used generously. A “Grade A” license signifies that these products are clean and wholesome and being pasteurized makes them double safe. Ask your grocer for Grade A Pasteurized Milk and Cream, Buttermilk and Cottage Cheese. Happy Thot Dairy Phone 3941 ................................. Hermiston, Ore. —===*==================