THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1945.
HERMISTON HERALD HERMISTON OREGON
IMPORTANT CHANGES
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PAGE FIVE
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turned from a week spent at Boise Bard and Mrs. Sue Waid were
receiving medical aid.
elected elders and will be installed i
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hughes and April 8 at the church service.
Effective April 1, Overland
Beverly were Easter guests of Mr.
Union 76 Gasoline
Triton Motor Oil
Mrs. F. B. Stuart, the oldest I
3 ($
Greyhound Lines will fur-
and Mrs. Magnus Hughes.
member, was the only member
£4
nish added bus service.
Visitors Easter at the Leo Clark that had perfect attendance for
P for New Arrivo!
and A . arrivais
tln, addition,
ail present
home were their son Glenn and the year. The Ladies Aid elected |
Fi
—,
end departures
win
wife, and sons from Hermiston, the following officers for next !
UCPGisE’- tint:
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Masters and year: president. Viola Greathouse:,
mmecssaeatas
Greyhound agent now to
daughter
from Hermiston, their vice president, Helen Swaney; 2nd
"Now is the time to change gear oil in your car!”
familiarize yourself with
son
Gene
and
wife and baby Gre vice president, Rose Hedrick: sec
these new schedules.
FUEL — OILS — INSECT SPRAYS
gory and Mrs. Rose Hedrick.
Hermiston Drug Co.
retary, Julia Penney; treasurer.
Mrs. Cora Coombs Olday is Lennä Waid; sewing directress.
Phone 2271
Prompt
Delivery - Phone 2751 - Geo. Harkenrider
spending a week in Portland, the Mrs. Bruce Willson; financial
guest of her daughter and hus chairman, Edna Fisk. The next
band, Mr. and Mrs. David Gibson. meeting will be an all day meet
Jimmy Garoutte, S/lc from the ing on Friday, April 13, and com
Pasco Naval base, was the guest of forts will be tied for the Red ly playing for them. The hostesses visitors present. Mrs. Ralph Bart
Miss Beryl Dewing last week end. Cross. A committee was appoint are Mrs. J. F. Rueber, Mrs. Vivian ley had charge of the program on
Carl Mollsted of the navy and ed to estimate repairs needed on Van Sickle and Miss Lennä Waid. the subject, Onions. The next
his mother, and Miss Mildred, all the manse. Mrs. John Peters is
Funeral services for Oscar Wil meeting will be April 10 at the
visited relatives in Pendleton Eas social secretary.
son, 40, were held from the Pente home of Mrs. Ellen Stillings.
Or rated i y
ter and Carl left the same day by
Mrs. Bessie Strand left last
The Study Club will have their costal church on Wednesday at 2
UNION PACIFIC STAGES, INC.
plane for Portland.
annual Guest Day April 5th, and p. m. His father, Robert Wilson, Wednesday for Minneapolis for a
At the Congregational meeting Miss Neva LeBlonde. the new came from La Cross, Wise. His month’s visit.
beside the grave of his twin sister. Saturday night Nathan Bard was county librarian, will be guest wife and seven children survive.
Mrs. Glenn Long is ill at her
The Lances came to Stanfield re-elected trustee, and Paul Baker speaker. Some special music will
The Harmony club met March home.
about three years ago.
By Mrt. Rute Hedrick
Mrs. J. E. Hogeland has return
elected instead of Martin Refvem be given by Alice Hedrick and 27 at the home of Mrs. Fred Shel
Rev. Glen Benintendi, wife and who has gone to California. Mr. Berniece Hughes with Phyllis Da ton with eight members and two ed from St. Anthony’s hospital.
Funeral services were held for children, have rented the Coff
Charles A. Lance, 52, on Easter man farm and moved there from
Sunday at 2:30 at the Baptist Ontario.
church at Milton with Rev. Fred
Mrs. Helen Schubert and Char
J. Greene giving the sermon. Sur lene of Payette, Idaho, is visiting
vivors are his wife. Anna, who al for a week with her sister, Mrs.
so has worked at Ordnance nearly Harry Muir. Charles Peters, fath
two years. His sons in the U. S. er of Mrs. Muir, also came for Eas
Army are Dale and Don in Texas, ter but returned to his home Mon
and Gene in France. His two day.
daughters, Mrs. Eva Ritter of Port
Miss Alice McGraw, daughter of
Angeles, Wash., and Mrs. Millie Mr. and Mrs. R. B. McGraw,
Stulton of Kirkland, Wash., and graduate of Hermiston High in '40,
27 1,,
the following sisters survive: Mrs. a worker at Umatilla Ordnance
- J-i ate -
Maggie Riggs and Mrs. Ida New Depot nearly two years, has en
ton of Portland and Mrs. Walton listed at Walla Walla in the Wacs.
Brock of Pendleton, and Mrs. Min She will leave April 10 for Ft.
"e -
nie Blizard of California who Oglethorpe, Ga., and upon comple
could not come. Another son, Bob tion of her medical technician
Lance, is in the U. S. Navy in the training course, expects to return
So. Pacific. Billy Miller from to McCaw hospital for service.
Farragut, Dick Miller and Merle
Mrs. Esther Mytinger and two
Lance are at home. His father, children from Spokane spent Eas
George Lance, also survives. In ter with relatives in Stanfield.
terment was at the city cemetery
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Ford are
moving this week to the Jack
Lawrence property which they re
cently purchased, vacated last
week by the Lawrence Leaders,
who moved into one of the build
ings on the CCC camp hill.
Mrs. F. M. Myers is improved in
health enough to be moved to the
Hi’
home of her daughter, Mrs. James
Dabney in Pendleton.
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Gudgel
spent Easter Sunday at the home
of their son Douglas in Pendleton.
Mrs. Gusta Behme, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Greathouse, all enjoyed
ONE STEP WONT
Easter services in Pendleton, the
I
GET YOU THERE
former visiting her daughter, Mrs.
Stanley
Thompson
and
the
latter
And One AD Won’t Bring
were the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Success-- You Must Keep On
Robert Starkweather.
Advertising
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hadley re
UNION OIL COMPANY
STANFIELD NEWS
ce .
Ito.
ZW UP CH/LLENS, GET BIG
SOF^EÜ Bmi CAN BUY MORE
WAR BONDS AiiD CITYFOLKS GET
THE PORK CHOPS THEY WANT."
?
nüd"
I
"We’ve had PP&L electric service
from cellar to garret since 1911"
says H. A. Reynolds, of the Prospect
Heights District, Walla Walla, Wash.
pumps. This well supplies water for two
houses, as well as for the barns, chicken
houses, and quite a bit of irrigation.
“When our farm home was built, in 1900,
we had a carbide gas lighting system built
in, but in 1911, the year after PP&L was
organized, they brought electric service to our
farm—about two miles south of town. The
same line also served the Prospect Heights
school house, one of the first rural schools
in this area to get electric lights.
"Vntil a fellow stops and thinks bach thirty
Tn 1858 a log cabin was built on this
place. It’s still standing and is quite a historic
landmark. Now it serves as a storeroom,
and has electric lights like all our other farm
buildings.
“As early as 1918, electric lights were in
stalled in our chicken houses to step up egg
production. I believe this was the first installa
tion of its kind in the Walla Walla area.
“We have a big well on the place—20 feet
in diameter — with two automatic electric
HOW TO MAKE LIFE EASY
FOR YOUR TRACTOR
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bearings... to seal these vital bearings from dust and mud
... use RPM Tractor Roller Lubricant ! It flows freely yet
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resilient protective film. You can’t afford to do without h!
Sam Moore
Hermiston, Oregon
Your local
STANDARD
representative for
OF
CALIFORNIA
•35 YEARS
1
1910 Mazda lamp re
places old carbon bulb,
giving more light per
kwh. PP&L gives users
more kwh per dollar.
OF
1920 Electric cook
ing being popularized
by Pacific Power &
Light. Electric water
heating era on the way.
or thirty-pve years, he hardly realises how
much progress we've made electrically since
PP&L started in business. And the same 'lo
ghead’ spirit is bound to carry us along in
the future."
•
•
•
•
Mr. Reynolds was born in 1863 on the farm where he
makes his home now. He attended Whitman Seminary
(later Whitman College), then went to the University of
Michigan, graduating in 1886. Returning to Walla Walla,
he studied law and was admitted to the bar.
In 1900 Mr. Reynolds bought his present 240-acre
farm, part of the 640-acre donation land claim which
had belonged to his mother. He has served four terms
as Walla Walla County Commissioner, and two terms
as a representative in the Washington State Legislature.
Mr. Reynolds has five adult children. Two daughters
live with him on the farm, and one daughter lives in
Southern California. His son, Jay, was a flight instructor
in Montana until recently, and Allen, his other son,
teaches high school in Walla Walla.
E L E C T R ICAl
1930
•
The whole elec
tric industry promotes
food saving and health
protection with elec
trical refrigeration.
PROGRESS’
1940 Development
of fluorescent lighting
offers mproved oppor
tunities for "Belter
Light —Better Sight”.
1945 Television now
ready for post-war
homes. Great advances
in science of electronics
await peacetime use.
P acific P ower & L ight C ompany
Your Business-Managed Power System