Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, January 23, 1930, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. 23, 1930.
PAGE THREE
IONE
MRS. JENNIE E. McMURRAT,
Correspondent
Miss Hazel Akers, eldest daughter
of Ralph Akers, and Russel Miller,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller,
were married Saturday, Jan. 11, at
Hood River. The young people were
accompanied by the parents of the
groom, who witnessed the ceremony.
From Hood River the party pro
ceeded to Gresham where they
spent a week, returning to lone
Saturday, Jan. 18. Mr. and Mrs.
Miller are very popular among the
younger set, being interested In
both church and social activities.
Both are graduates of the lone high
school. The many friends here wish
them happiness.
Miss Maude Knight, teacher of
the first and second grades, reports
the following pupils who have been
perfect in attendance during the
past six weeks: first grade, Wallace
Billiard and Robert Perry; second
grade, Walter Corley, Kemp Dick,
Earllne Ferris, Francis Fitzpatrlck,
Gordon Gross, Dorothy Howell, Ei
leen Sperry and Bobby Cantwell.
On the honor roll are, first grade,
Mary Katherlne Blake, Wallace
Bullard, Helen Gross and Grace Lln
deken; second grade, Earllne Fer
ris, Francis Fitzpatrick, Dorothy
Howell and Blllle Blake.
Miss Hlldegarde Williams, teach
er of the third and fourth grades,
reports the following pupils who
have been perfect in attendance:
third grade, Dorothy Brady, Harold
Buchanan, Jane Fitzpatrlck, Fred
Gross and Bobby Sparks; fourth
grade, Eleanor Ruth Bullard, Dav
id Cantwell, Ruth Crawford, Sibyl
Howell, Maxlne McCurdy, Marvin
Rankin, Winona Ritchie and Ray
Beezley. On the honor roll are,
third grade, Valjean Clark, Fred
Gross, Helen Lundell, Joan Slpea
and Bobby Sparks; fourth grade,
Maxine McCurdy, Sibyl Howell,
Ruth Crawford, Eleanor Ruth Bul
lrad and Bertha Akers.
Mrs. Frieda Slocum, teacher of
the fifth and sixth grades, reports
the following perfect in attendance:
fifth grade, Mignonette Perry, Char
lotte McCabe, Margaret Lindeken,
Winnie Brown; sixth grade, John
Farrls, Ross Belle Perry, Miriam
Hale, Francis Bryson, Mildred Kel
ly, Rollo Crawford, Lewis Beezley,
Eugene Normoyle and Harlan Mc
Curdy. On the honor roll are, fifth
grade, Charlotte McCabe, Junior
Mason and Margaret Lindeken;
sixth grade, Ross Belle Perry, Mir
iam Hale and Harlan McCurdy.
Mrs. Harriet Brown, seventh and
eighth grade teacher reports per
fect attendance as follows: seventh
grade, Edwin Dick, Helen Grabill,
Harriet Heliker, Frederick Rankin,
Marguerite Troge, Harley Wright,
Guyla Cason; eighth grade, Berl
Akers, Walter Bristow, Henry
Buschke, Josephine Buschke and
Arthur Crawford. On the honor
roll: seventh grade, Edwin Dick,
Carl Lindeken and Clifford Yarnell;
eighth grade, Fred Nelson and Ed
rls Ritchie.
Semester exams were held last
week In the high school. The names
of the honor pupils are Margaret
Crawford, Virgil Estcb, Clara Nel
son, Kenneth Smouse, Berton Clark,
Gladys Brashears, Charles Lundell,
Kenneth Akers, Mary Healey, Bcu
lah Pettyjohn, Geneva Pettyjohn,
Mildred Smith, Norman Nelson,
Ruth Keene and Josephine Healey.
Virgil Esteb deserves special men
tion by being exempt in Ave sub
jects. Gladys Brashears was ex
empt In all four.
lone high met defeat from Lex
ington on Ione's floor last Friday
night. Our basketball teams are
receiving very poor encouragement
from the public, only a small num
ber being present.
The attendance at school is poor
this week. Some of the school bus
ses are able to make only a part of
their trip and some are not making
the drive at all.
The fruit and bread men from
Pendleton were unable to make the
return trip Monday and were forced
to spend the night in lone. Although
the snow plow cleared the road, the
wind drifted the snow so badly that
it was impossible for them to make
the trip.
Monday night while the snow
plow was clearing roads, it ran into
the truck which is used to furnish
lights for the night work. The col
lision resulted in a broken pipe in
the water system on the plow which
made it necessary to suspend work
for the night.
Mrs. Charley Shaver has been
very 111 with tonsilitis.
Henry Cohn is feeding 1200 head
of sheep on the Fred McMurray
ranch.
William Strobel who has been
baling hay on the Fred McMurray
ranch, moved his outfit to the Glen
Ball ranch the first of last week.
The men engaged In the work have
returned to their homes In Board
man to wait until the weather mod
erates. Guy Cason, who is employed in a
barber shop at The Dalles, came up
Friday for a brief visit with his
family who are spending the winter
on the Lana Padberg ranch on
Rhea creek.
One poultry raiser in lone has a
brood of thrifty chicks hatched on
January 12. The hen hatched 12
chickens from 13 eggs, and because
she thought the thirteenth an un
lucky day, she hatched her chicks
on the twelfth, only nineteen days
from the time she was set. At the
time of going to press, the mother
and 12 babies were doing well.
On Friday, while making the reg
ular trip to Heppner, the stage
broke down between lone and Lex
ington, and the passengers were
transported by auto.
Ernst Montandon, who is a pa
tient In a Hood River hospital, is
in serious condition. Thus far his
surgeon has not deemed it best to
operate. A specialist has been call
ed from Portland.
Friends here have received word
that Mr. and Mrs. Paul Balsiger had
reached Greenville, 111., the home of
Mrs. Balsiger's mother. They had
made several visits along the way
and were enjoying their trip to the
fullest
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brown motored
to Stanfield Friday evening return
ing Sunday. They had considerable
trouble making the drive home.
David Rietmann received a pain
ful injury Thursday of last week
when he fell, striking a fourth inch
bolt in such a way as to make an
ugly wound in his leg just above
the knee. On Saturday he was tak
en to the hospital in Heppner that
he might be near a doctor for med
ical attention. He is recovering
nicely.
The ground In this locality froze
January 4, stopping all farming
activities. Since that time King
Winter has reigned supreme. By
the middle of last week we had
about five inches of snow and
Thursday morning we awoke to find
the snow covered with a fine dust
or volcanic ash; from whence it
came no one seems to know. Not
only was the snow covered, but the
Boors and furniture in the homes
were covered as well. Saturday
and Sunday snow continued to fall,
reaching a depth of sixteen inches.
Monday morning the thermometer
registered 16 below zero, and Tues
day morning it was 24 below. Every
one is wishing for a moderation of
weather conditions.
The state highway department
kept the snow plow running day
and night during the storm in or
der to keep the highway safe for
travel. Mr. Sexton and Clinton
Jackson were on the day shift and
George Ritchie and Harry Shipley
were night men.
The old coasting track is attract
ing the usual crowd. The gleam of
the bonfire may be seen far into
the night
FOUNDER OF SPRAY DIES.
John F. Spray, 70, founder of the
town and postofflce of Spray, died
of apoplexy In his home in Fossil
Saturday, January 11. Services were
conducted at the Methodist church
in Fossil and the remains shipped
to Cottage Grove for Interment.
Use of Lamb is Urged
To Give Diet Variety
Lamb is always available in any
section of the country. There is no
time when the housewife cannot
enjoy the advantage of varying her
menu with lamb, according to the
National Live Stock and Meat
board. Too few meat buyers realize
this, due probably to the widespread
but mistaken Idea that lamb is not
to be had except for a few months
of the year, during the spring and
early summer.
This seems to be the only good
reason why lamb, which is delicious
and which furnishes excellent roasts
and chops, is not ufeed more exten
sively than it is, the board contin
ues. The entire lamb carcass is ten
der, hence there is not the problem
of a great difference in cooking
methods to render certain cuts ten
der. The forequarter cuts may be
roasted or broiled as well as the
hindquarter cuts. There Is conven
ience and economy for the house
wife in this fact While the breast
may not be so desirable a roast as
the shoulder or the leg, as it Is a
thinner piece of meat, yet it is ten
der and well flavored and is very
moderate in price. While steaks cut
from the arm side or the rib side
of the shoulder may not be so at
tractive in appearance as the rib or
loin chops, yet they are tender and
well flavored and they may be broil
ed with just as satisfactory results
as the so-called choice chops. In
deed, in the lamb, we have a source
of meat, all of which may be cooked
by the cookery methods applied to
tender cuts; namely, roasting, broil-
John Day Valley Freight Line
(Incorporated)
Operating between Heppner and Portland and
John Day Highway Points..
DAILY SERVICE
GET OUR RATES ON TURKEYS
and other produce before shipping
$10,00 Cargo Insurance
Office Cm GARAGE, Phone 172
M. VENABLE, Mgr.
Working for YOU
IT IS the earnest desire of
this company to serve you
quickly and obligingly,
saving your time and giv
ing you satisfaction in
every contact we are privi
leged to have with you.
When you call our
"business office" to order
service or service changes,
or to get counsel on a tele
phone problem, an experi
enced employee sits di
rectly before a file that
contains the history of
our service to you.
Your telephone prob
lem then becomes his or
her personal interest. It
will be properly recorded
and then carefully fol
lowed up.
Telephone service is a
personaservice. Wewant
you to feel that we are
working for you.
The Pacific Telephone And Telegraph Company
Prepare for Spring Plowing
USE
THE BATES CRAWLER TRACTOR
30, 40 and 80 H. P. Models
PAUL G. BALSIGER, lone, Oregon
Agent for Morrow County
Don't Freeze
During this cold weather, when you can
get good, dry pine wood. Give us an order
now, before our stock of 40 cords of 16-inch
wood is depleted.
F. W. Turner & Co.
Representing Reliable Companies.
OLDSMOB1LE
offers
IMPORTANT
IMPROVEMENTS
. . . resulting in smarter style, greater
luxury, and increased motoring satis
faction without one change in the
fundamentals which made this car so pop
ular . Refinements include longer, lower
bodies roomier interiors deeper seats
improved carburetion more responsive
steering and improved, fully-enclosed
four-wheel brakes all are definite addi
tions to Oldsmobile value.
TWO-DOOR SEDAN JSW M o. b. ftttory, Laming
Span T irt and Bum(wr Extra
lng, and panbroiling.
Figures regarding the consump
tion of lamb show that while about
75 per cent of the lamb raised is
produced west of the Mississippi
river, nearly 90 per cent of It is
eaten east of the Mississippi. The
most extensive use of lamb Is along
the Atlantic seaboard, the South is
next in the consumption of lamb;
then the West, and the Corn Belt
consumes less than any other sec
tion of the country.
Since Improved methods of pro
duction and distribution have made
lamb available at all times of the
year, the housewife who desires a
pleasing variety In her meals will
be glad to have this fact called to
her attention.
HORSE-MEAT SAUSAGE CITED.
It has long been an axiom that
meat consigned to sausage had lost
DRINK MORE MILK
Wise old Mother Nature made milk
for children. Into It she put every
thing needed for sustenance, and In
the most easily assimilated form.
So, Drink More Milk. Let the
children have plenty. It If the
cheapest food you can buy.
Alfalfa Lawn Dairy
WIOHTMAN BROS, Props.
Phone 80F3
r-" isuas x
FERGUSON MOTOR CO.
Its identity completely, but now
modern science has changed even
this. Oregon State college veterin
ary specialists have Just proved by
means of blood tests on rabbits that
horse meat was being used In
"pork" sausage by a Portland firm.
The proof wsa to conclusive that
the firm never even contested re
voking of its license by the state
and city health departments.
WHEAT EXPORTS SMALL.
The disappointingly small volume
of purchases by importing countries,
since the first of the year, has cre-
ated a more pronounced feeling of
general bearishnesa in the wheat
trade, than at any time since the
spring of last year. The United
Kingdom and the Continent con
tinue to take offerings of countries
exporting wheat to bolster unfavor
able trade balances and exchange
rates, leaving North America hold
ing most of the world's surplus. One
full cargo was worked from Port
land to the United Kingdom on a
favorable freight basis this week.
Local ads In the Gazette Times
bring results.
Where Has Your
Money Gone?
The practical way to find out is to have
a checking account in this bank. Your stubs
give you a complete record of all financial
transactions. You always know where your
money has gone.
You should open your account today.
Farmers & Stockgrowers National
Heppner Bftllk 0re?on
FOOD STORES YDU DELIGHT TO CALL-
MY
MB!
RipoRtSpiii
"MacMarr Stores are MY stores!" Many times we have heard our custom
ers say just that. And why not? Every move we make; every item we
add to our stocks; every bit of professional food service we extend is for
your best interests first and foremost. Try regularly, this newer and
better food service and you, too, will say "and they are MY stores, too"!
Features for Friday & Saturday, Jan. 24-25
ORANGES
No. 126s
Per Doz 63C
ORANGES
No. 100s
Per Doz 79C
We Will Give Away
ONE 8-OZ. BOTTLE PUREX
WITH EACH QUART PCREX
PURCHASED
Allf.
or
29c
CORN FLAKES
Kellogg Brand
3 for 25c
RICEFLAKES .
Heinz Brand
2 for 25c
RED SALMON
Llbby's Brand tall cans
2f
or
65c
Mac MARR COFFEE
1 lb 39c
3 lb : $1.15
HAMS
An Eastern Product
Per lb 30C
CATSUP
Del Monte Brand pint bottles
2 for 39c
SNOW DRIFT
3 lb 83c
SARDINES
Booth's Oval Ting
3 for 40C
SUGAR
PURE CANE
251b..
1001b.
$1.85
$6.19
CRACKERS
Salted or Plain
3 lb. Box 45c
CIGARETTES
Camel and Chesterfield Brands
Per Carton ..$1.19
WHITE KING
Per Pks 43C
PINK SALMON
Happy Vale Brand tall tins
3f
or
65c
ECONOMY BRAND
COFFEE
1 lb.
31b.
35c
$1.00
BACON
Armour Product
Per lb 31C
CATSUP
Heinz Brand pint bottle
2 for 55c
Jewell Shortening
8 lb $1.45
Phone 1082
STONE'S DIVISION Hotel Ileppner Bldg.