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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1944)
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 1944 THE HERMISTON HERALD. HERMISTON. OREGON Select Their Gifts Rou.. at Stone’s Read These Rules 2" Address correctly. Wrap them securely. Weight limit. 5 lbs. Size: 15 in. long. 36 in. length and girth combined. 5. Prepay full postage. 6. Christmas Cards must be in sealed envelopes, but can be mailed any time. 1. 2. 3, 4. • A, 48 ,Y ei More items Much to the Liking of G. I. Joe ennoy.... 13-oz. pkg. .25 Sure, they’re well fed. but they like delicacies. The hitch is in the mail ing. Home-made cakes and cookies take an awful beating; worms get at them first unless they are properly packed. Pack perishables IN TIN or they will be wasted. Bridge-Mix delicious hard candy they all like to munch on. OLIVES......... 4-oz. tin .13 Libby chopped—in tin. are considered a delicacy, not “chow.” Peanut Clusters 9-oz. box .38 Fruit Nut Mix Chocolate* 12-lb. .58 Mu Mu Caramels 2-lb. box .85 Fénix Vanilla Choc. Bar* 5-7 oz. .23 O. M. Cocktail Cherries 8-oz. .28 Palmolive Soap—bath size 2 for .19 Cashmere Bouquet Soap cake 3 / .27 Vermont Maple Cm. Syrup 6-oz. .49 Vermont Maple Sugar 3-oz. pkg. .32 Vermont Maple Sugar 212-oz. .32 TOBACCO l-lb. pkg. .70 Velvet—if he’s a pipe smoker this will be welcome. musHROoms 4-oz. .34 Keystone quality pieces and stems. They will appreciate this, it's different Lumberjack Syrup Swan Soap distributor medium bar............ CHEESE, Gold Medal, 12 pts Swan Soap . 3 for .29 giant bar . 3 for .19 cake N/[ Jot 37 Round STERK, Grade R 15 pts. .40 Lifebuoy Toilet Soap $ RIR STERK, Grade R II pts., lb. .33 $ REEF SHORT RIBS, Grade R lb. .IS Rinso package ............. LURCH RIEHT, assorted 3-lb. glass J $ LARD, open kettle renderà 4 lbs. .72 Palmolive, bath size cake lb. .33 “Ve . 2 for .19 glIlli H B Is Sili 1 lìT7ÏII ITT LAN your own dmRKÍIVíPf Honey . 5-lb. pail I17 Dills.. 24-oz.jar .32 Bradshaws new pack—buy now for canning. C. H. B. quality, more delicious than ever. Syrup. 16-oz. jar .22 Sweets 12-oz. jar .28 Log Cabin—America’s delicious breakfast treat. PEACHES C.H.B. cross slice sweets, cured to a tasty crispness. C.H.B. Sliced Sweets, 8-oz. gl............ . C.H.B. Soy Sauce, 5-oz. glass............ Friendwood Pimentoes, 6-oz. glass.... Old Monk Mayonnaise, pint.............. Hunts Pork and Beans, 29-oz. glass ... Hunts Royal Anne Cherries, 29-oz. tin Crystal Marmalade, 2-lb. jar ............. Diamond Peanut Butter, 24-oz. jar.... ELBERTAS .29 .15 .20 .33 .25 .32 .29 .29 nonti» Apple Bex . $2.09 V FOOD STORES Prices Effective Sept. 8 to 15—Subject to Market Changes. B. B. Middleton home on Buckley St. Clayton Norton, Echo coach last year, is now employed at Ordnance while awaiting his call to service Echo school opened Tuesday morn- which is expected soon. He recently ing with a short forenoon session for returned from Wall. S. Dakota, where registration and assignments, and he was called by the death of his Supt. Warren M. Center called a fac- mother. . uity meeting that afternoon in prepa- | Miss V’irginia Richards, who haa ration for regular class work Wednes- Ec- _ been living at Stanfield, moved to___ day. Four school buses will operate ho this week and is rooming at the to Echo this year, one with Floyd | home of Mrs. M. E. Meyers. Mathers as driver, picking up child- " ‘ — Morton V. Wolverton left Thursday ... . A)2. v:.. gT)., p 1 ' ren at Alpine. Pine City and Butter for Glendale, Calif., after a ten day . •Creek districts; Wm. Helmick oper- . visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ' ates stag .) a bus service one over the Meadows M. C. Wolverton. He has been em- district again this year, using two ployed since May. 1941. in the Lock passenger cars because of increase in heed aircraft plant at Burbank. Be- number of pupils; the east side route cause of travel conditions his wife is being handled by E. J. Nieland, and and son were unable to 7 make the trip ------- porne- —— the bus from Nolin is being driven i with him. this year by Joe Dupuis. Mrs. Nell Arnold of Butter Creek In the high school there are two has purchased a house at Hermiston, new teachers. Mrs. Gladys Alberding and moved from her farm home Mon- of Bay City, who will teach English I day so that her daughter Mary could and Spanish, and Betty Lee Peterson 1 start in the Hermiston high school from Eugene, who will have commer- Tuesday. cial courses. Earl B. Cotton will con Mr. and Mrs. Harry Andrews at tinue to handle mathematics and sci tended the Hereford sale at Ellens- ence. Grade teachers are Miss Mar burg recently where Mr. Andrews tha Freeman of Spokane, 7th and 8th purchased a pedigreed young bull and grades; Mrs. Harold Liesegang. Echo. a cow and a calf. 5th and 6th: Bennetta Briggs of La Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Saylor and Grande. 3rd and 4th, «nu and —- Mrs. Irma ----- P - uiiu Pe it ma family -&i-y oi nave ----- of Duiier Butter VIEEA Creek have returned McElroy of Pendleton. primary teach- from a week’s vacation at the coast. I er. All of these are new to Echo - Roger ----- • - the Hollomon has moved • to I school except Mrs. Liesegang who ditch house in the Butter Creek dis- I taught in the grades two years ago. trict near the Harry Andrews ranch. A family reunion honoring the 39th Mrs. Harold Liesegang returned wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Wednesday from California where Morton C. Wolverton was held at she spent two weeks with her husband their home near Echo this week, Four who is stationed there for the next of their children and families were few weeks. present: Mrs. Vera Young and sons, In a letter to his parents. Mr. and Jim and Rawleigh and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Edward Liesegang, Tech. Sgt. Harry Blixseth of Pendleton; Mrs. Eddie Liesegang says he is leaving Mildred Ott and children. Donald and the Kentucky camp where he has been Gwendolyn of Summerville; Morton stationed. but does not know his des V. Wolverton of Glendale. Cal., and tination. Mrs. Leona Cunnington of Walla Wal la. Other guests included Mrs. Ida Bloom of Echo. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Bloom and two children of Hermiston, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Rucker and daugh ter Iva Joan of Irrigon, Chosie Sand lin of Hanford. Wn.. Mrs. Mary Vance of Hermiston, Sgt. Clyde L. Ott on furlough from Panama Canal Zone and Miss Thelma Pulver of LaGrande. Mr. and Mrs. Wolverton were married in Wallowa county September 3. 1905 and have been residents of Echo and vicinity since 1913. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Sweet, who have resided in the Heliums house east of town, moved Wednesday to Seattle where Mr. Sweet has a gov ernment position. The Heliums house i has been rented by Mrs. Gladys Al- | , herding, who will reside there with her two daughters and Miss Betty Lee Peterson, another teacher. Mrs. .1. A. Heliums snent last week in Echo visiting relatives. She and Mr. Heliums now reside at Van- couver. Wn. She says their son son Alfred is now a cornoral in an engi neers maintenance division stationed in Persie, and Virdin is a carpenters mate in the navy awaiting assignment at Norfolk. Va. September started out with a wel come rain of .32 of an inch, breaking a dry spell that lasted from June 22. Talk about dealing! The onlv rain in that period was .02 More than 5000 times of an inch on July 4. Maximum tern- nerature for August was 100 on the each minute v / 30th and minimum was 35 on the your distrib- - / r- 19th. utor deals Ths Walter Wiglesworth was here Sat urday to move the last of his house the right hold goods to Hood River where he is amount of —A employed bv the Tum-A-Lum Co. The Wiglesworth house at Westlawn has been sold to Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Loyd, who moved into their new home spark plug last week. at the right instant. M. D. Parker, new station agent for the Union Pacific at Echo, and his family are now housed in the Luciani residence east of town. He reports that Echo has trouble retaining night If it should get out of operators. For some time young women have been employed on these whack, your engine runs shifts, but they no more than get bro jerkily, knocks, or backfires. ken into the routine then they resign to get married. Two operators have been lost this way recently. Mrs. Al Hiatt. Mrs. K. Shopshire and son Alvin K„ are here from Red mond for a few weeks visit with rela tives. Mrs. Hiatt reports that her son Charles is now a pilot on fighter NG planes in the navy and is awaiting as signment at the Klamath Falls camp. He recently met Raymond Hollomon. a former Echo school boy, who is also To keep your distrib stationed there. She says that M. E. Larive. former Echo school superin utor dealing sparks tendent. has purchased a new home at without a miss—and pro Redmond and is getting along nicely tect all the other important in his school position there. A reception for teachers of Echo parts of your car at the school will be held at the Methodist same time—is the job of church Friday evening, September .8, Shellubrication. to which all school patrons are invit- ed. The program for the occasion is in charge of Rev. Cotton. Mrs. John Reiss, who taught school at Echo last year, was here Saturday Shellubrication is the from Ft. Lewis where she has been visiting her husband, a member of the best guarantee we army engineer corps. She went to know that Weston the first of the week where something she will teach this year. Welland Dorn, private in communi hard to re cations division field artillery, is place won’t home on a furlough. He has been sta burn out. tioned at Camp Roberts, Calif., but will report after his present furlough to Little Rock. Arkansas, leaving just get Thursday for that camp. The climate tired and quit. (And 5000 at the California camp did not please cars do quit every day — Welland and he is glad to be trans ferred to Arkansas where it rains oc junk pile victims of neglect casionally. Ind wartime stop and go.) Kenneth Bowman, carpenters mate 2nd class, who is stationed at Tacoma, will be home this week end for a visit with his family. Miss Louise Tolar was operated on LOOK, GIRISI at the Ordnance hospital Monday for Go Sheil’s stu appendicitis. She is reported getting boekfet, Alice la along nicely. Miss Martha Freeman, Echo grade Malarlaat. It teacher, will reside this winter at the ECHO NEWS ITEMS This is a cow .2 ano" tome uni”* 24-oz. jug ................... PAGE THREE \ QUALITY SHOE REPAIRING Il SHELL OIL COMPANY, Incorporated Will Pay Prompt Attention To Mail Order* LEE’S SHOE SHOP 123 S- E. Court — Pendleton GASOLINE POWERS THE ATTACK