Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, January 02, 1936, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. 2, 1936
PAGE THREE
3LdH IHkpp
C. J. D. Bauman, S. E. Notson,
Joseph Belanger and Jasper Craw
ford motored to The Dalles Tuesday
morning for the annual New Year's
parade of progress banquet spon
sored by The Dalles Lions club
with cooperation of other service
vorganlzations of that city.
Mrs. A. Q. Thomson and daughter,
Miss Beatrice, arrived Sunday
from McMlnnville for a short visit
with friends and relatives. Mrs.
Thomson has been writing insur
ance at McMlnnville for some time,
while Miss Thomson is a student at
Oregon State college.
Harry Schriever was up from the
north Lexington farm Monday. He
reported digging in his summer
fallow field to find new moisture to
a depth of about seven inches. More
moisture is needed and the ground
is in good condition to receive it.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Moore of Spo
kane were holiday visitors at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Patter
son. Mra Moore will be remem
bered by former friends here as
Miss Margaret West, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom West
Mr. and Mrs. Walter La Dusire
came over from their home at La
Grande the first of the week for a
short visit at the home of Mrs. La
Dusire's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R.
W. Turner, and with other rela
tives and friends.
The arrival of an 8-pound girl to
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Notson in
Portland last Tuesday night was
announced by Mr. Notson to his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Notson,
a few minutes after arrival of the
new year.
Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Clark de
parted Monday night for Eugene,
where Mr. Clark went to consult a
medical specialist. He has been
ill for some time, though was suf
ficiently recovered to make the trip.
Mrs. Adelyn O'Shea and son,
Dick, were over- New Year's guests
at the home of Mrs. O'Shea's sister,
Mrs. Harold Cohn, coming up from
their home at Portland.
Application for marriage license
was made at the clerk's office Tues
day by Miss Camilla Kilkenny and
Mr. James Monahan.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Vernice
Crawford of lone at the home of
Mrs. Ada Cason in this city, Sunday,
a 9 14 -pound son. ,
The American Legion Auxiliary
will meet Tuesday evening, Jan. 7,
at the home of Mrs. Raymond Fer
guson. Dr. J. P. Stewart, Eye-Sight Spec
ialist of Pendleton, will be at Hotel
Heppner on Wednesday, Jan. 8th.
THE
Hehisch
Published by the Journalism Class
of HEPPNER HIGH SCHOOL
Editor Dora Bailey
Assistant Louise Anderson
Grade News Helen Van Schoiack
Basketball Game Charles Cox
Humor, Betty Hill and Louise Mc
Ferrin. Features, Norma Jean Beckett and
Jimmy Driscoll.
H.H.S.
Editorial
The New Year is here, and where
are we? Have we decided to mako
this a new year or just another
year? There is a lot of difference
if you stop and think it over. Are
Want Ads
Lost Female police dog. Answers
to the name of Trix. Please notify
Mrs. Werner Rletmann, lone. 43.
Wagon repair factory. Experi
enced workmen. Cutting down
wheels a specialty. Guaranteed
satisfaction. Write for low prices.
Home Supply Company, Lakevlew,
Ore. 42-45p
Lost at Elks dance Tuesday eve
ning, black overcoat, initials R. T.
on Inside pocket. Reward. Leave
at Thomson Bros, store. ltp
Man Wanted for Rawleigh Route
of 800 families. Write today. Raw
leigh, Dept ORA-84-SA, Oakland,
Calif. 43-44
Stock and wheat ranch for sale
on easy terms; 7 ml. N. E. of Hepp
ner; also 370 young ewes and new
stock scales. Inquire Mr. and Mrs.
M. J. Devln, city. 43-48p
For Sale 16-in. dry wood, near
highway, $3.50 cord. Harry French,
Hardman. 43tf.
For Sale New Hampshire cock
erels, six months, none better.
Frank Rumble, Morrow General
Hospital, Heppner. 43-44p
For Sale 6 R.I.R. roosters, blood
tested, $1.50 each. Harry Schriever,
Lexington. 43p
Highest eastern prices for car
loads broke or range horses, mulea
and colts. Fred Chandler Horse
and Mule Market, Charlton, Iowa.
39-43
Maternity and convalescent cases
eared for in my home. Mrs. J. B.
Cason. 5tf.
For Sale or Trade 1 bay horse,
8 yrs. old, 1850, broke single or dou
ble, broke to ride; one horse 6 yrs.
old, 1400, broke single or double;
one saddle horse, 7 yrs. old, none
better. Will trade for cattle or
sheep. W. H. French, Hardman.
38tf.
we going to go right along as we al
ways have and not even try to do
better? Let's atop and think it ovei
a little. Do we want to be just the
same as we were last year? I don't
believe we do. Let us try to do bet
ter, and if we do better, we will be
happier.
We have an honor roll that is
posted every six weeks. Only about
one-fourth of the students are on
this honor roll. That Is one thing
that we must do better work. Even
if it is impossible or too difficult
for some to get their names on the
honor roll, they can at least keep
their names off the dishonor roll.
Let us all try to make 1936 a new
year and not just another year.
H.H.S.
Grade News
On Friday, December 20, a Christ
mas program was given by the
sixth grade. Many mothers attend
ed. The program was as follows:
Song, "Jingle Bells," by Margaret
Tamblyn, Lucille Barlow, Elizabeth
Healy, Merle Burkenbine, Dick
Ferguson and Lyle Cox; poems,
Hurrah! Hurrah!" by Claud Snow,
"My Christmas Star" by Frances
McRoberts, "A Christmas Tree
Lad" by Kay Ferguson, and "Se
lecting a Tree" by Elizabeth Healy;
playlet, "The Meaning of Christ
mas," given by Ralph Taylor,
Kathryn Nys, Margaret Tamblyn,
Elliott Newport and Dick Fergu
son; and a story of "Snowed in With
Christmas" given by Berdine Vance,
Dick Ferguson, Jackson Cantwell
and Ellen Hughes.
Eunice Hiatt has moved to Her
miston. H.H.S.
Heppner Irish Prepare for Condon
The Heppner Irislj will entertain
the Condon hoopsters on the local
maple court Friday, January 3. The
powerful Condon squad is due foi
an unexpected surprise. The Hepp
ner squad is out for game, and the
Condon boys look like the most
most likely prey.
The Irish are weakened by the
loss of a valuable player in La
Verne Van Marter, who is ill. How
ever, they expect to make up for
this loss by more cooperation, bet
ter, passing, and better shooting in
the coming game.
Watch out! Heppner is due for
a bang-up game.
H.H.S.
"Ice Screams"
It was rather funny to be able
to see and not be seen for a couple
of days during our vacation. Did
you happen to be an unobserved
observer when someone was trying
to go up a little Incline, or funnier
yet, down one?
Wasn't it embarrassing to get to
your own gate and then have to
crawl on your hands and knees? It
was better to crawl or hang on to
something than to fall on the ice
though, wasn't it? Did you have
anything but a funny feeling when
you put your foot on the brake of
your car, and you either kept on
going or went around in circles? It
almost seems ridiculous, but that's
what it was like for a few days
last week.
H.H.S.
Humor
Mr. Bloom (entering the Ameri
can History room): "Order, please! '
Norton: "Ham and eggs."
Miss Peterson: "Run up the cur
tain." Ellis: "What do you think I am,
a monkey?"
Ethyl and Marie were out riding
when the car stalled.
Ethyl: "Use your noodle, Marie!"
Marie: "For goodness sakes,
where is it? I've pushed and pulled
everything in this can."
Wouldn't it be funny if
Someone thought of some new
jokes?
If the Shoun brothers got to
school on time?
If Kay Parker's laugh were con
tagious? If the assistant editor got through
without some help?
If the girls could resist looking
out the window when they hear a
horse running?
H.H.S.
The New Year
Here she comes! There she goes!
And another year has touched our
lives, left its marks, and passed on
Into that infinite abyss from which
all comes and into which all returns.
Here and there it has added a lit
tle, and here and there it has de
tracted from our lives. Here and
there some bemoan the misfortunes
which have accompanied it, and yet
there are many who utter a fervent
thanks for what it has brought
them.
New Year's Day, the time for
resolutions, has arrived. Oh, yes,
resolutions are still made; some
frlvously, some unthinkingly, some
with known exaggeration, and even
some with sincerity, but none of
them are kept. It Is little more,
now, than sacrilege of a once more
pious custom, yet the ideal which
It perpetuates can never be anti
quated. The resolver says, "I want to do
better. I can do better. And by
all the powers of heaven and earth
I will do better!" But will he? Of,
is he merely observing a formality?
Perhaps a less loudly voiced de
termination, replaced by such Im
plicit trust as the poet Bryant ex
presses in his lines "To a Water
fowl," would go much farther in
keeping the true spirit of the New
Year
"He, who from zone to zone;
Guides through the boundless sky
thy certain flight,
In the long way that I must tread
alone
Will lend my steps aright"
CARD OF THANKS.
We wish to thank our many
frionds and relatives for their sin
cere sympathy and for the beauti
ful floral offerings for our beloved
husband and father.
Mrs. W. R. Munkers,
Sons and Daughters,
Safeway Stores Boost
Newspaper Advertising
Oakland, Dec. 31. Newspaper
advertising and its increasing value
to the continued business and in
dustrial development of the nation
was emphasized here today in a
statement made public by L. A
Warren, president of Safeway
stores, Inc.
Citing his own company as a bar
ometer to indicate the attitude of
business towards advertising, War
ren declared that he considered the
growth of Safeway Stores, Inc., and
other chain systems but a reflection
of the power of newspapers to
build and retain public respect and
public patronage.
"As far as Safeway is concerned,
"our advertising has been predom
nantly newspaper advertising, and
I consider it an important factor
in the growth of this company.
"It is through advertising that
people come to know and to un
derstand the scope of any business
concern's public service, and the
commodities it offers for public con
sumption. In this new age of com
merce and distribution, consistent
advertisng helps materially to cre
ate respect and confidence for those
who use newspaper space.
"It seems only natural that those
concerns using newspaper adver
tising uninterrupted year after year
do retain the highest confidence of
the public they serve. Their cus
tomers have found out that they
can truthfully rely upon the ad
vertised product, service and econ
omy which so often feature the
display copy of the chain stores."
Warren referred to the succession
of farmer - consumer campaigns
waged by Safeway Stores, Inc., to
help farmers stimulate consumption
for agricultural products as anoth
er example of the power of adver
tising. "We have repeatedly endeavored
to help farmers dispose of surplus
or distressed crops by conducting
widespread advertising campaigns
on certain products at various sea
sons of the year," he said. "These
campaigns have been eminently
successrui, and tneir beneficial ef
fects to agriculture are both a trib
ute to newspaper advertising and
the advantages of chain-store dis
tribution. "The fact that chain stores are
believers in advertising has con
siderably accelerated the pace of
their progress it has enlarged their
opportunities to further serve the
consuming public and pass on to
them the economical benefits of the
chain-store distribution system."
lone High Alumni
Hold Class Reunions
The graduating classes of 1934
and 1935 of lone high school held
a reunion at the A. H. Nelson home
December 27. Hosts were Ellen
and Fred Nelson and Donald and
Harriet Heliker. Those found pres
ent In class '34 were Henry Buschke,
Earle Pettyjohn, Walter Bristow,
Theodore Thompsen, Fred Nelson,
Raymond Lundell, Donald Heliker
Bruce-Barton
Mrs. President, Unlikely
A woman who had obtained a job
as co-pilot on an air-mall line re
signed because she could not enter
the Pilot's Union and so was not
permitted to fly passengers In bad
weather. This caused Amelia Ear-
hart to suggest the raising of a
fund "to break down the barriers
against women in aviation."
Miss Earhart has done much her
self to break down such barriers,
but it will take a long time to de
stroy the prejudice inherited thru
many generations in which men
have managed transportation. No
woman drove chariots through the
streets of Rome or commanded gal
leons on the Mediterranean. No
Indian squaw captains a canoe; no
dark-eyed maiden earned a living
as a gondolier, and even in modern
taxicabs not more than one driver
in a thousand is a woman.
These are sad historical facts,
and I do not blamt the self-reliant
maidens of the present from being
rebellious toward them. But there
is an even sadder fact which is
this the real despots who keep wo
men out of the top positions are not
the men but the women themselves.
A leading feminist refused to have
a woman doctor when her children
were born. "I like women," she
said, "and I battle for them. But
when I am sick I don't want one
fussing around me." Another wo
man, successful in business, re
fused an interview to a woman
bond-salesman. "I work hard for
my money," she explained. "Do
you think I want to let a woman
invest it?"
An organization which proposes
to elect a woman President of the
United States asks me to write in
favor of their movement, but I an
swer that it will no do good. "The
men will not put up much of a
fight," I say, "But you never will
be successful. No woman will be
President, because the women will
vote against her."
For some millions of years wives
have turned to husbands in emer
gencies and cried: "What shall I
do?" Some day doubtless this habit
will pass away in just about as
many million years as it has taken
the habit to be formed.
Faith Greater Than Hope
"Billy Sunday is dead but he
had something worth more than
money or fame or the splendor of
kings. If you are a very sophisti
cated person you may have thought
him an emotional clown, but nc
one who knew him ever could doubt
that he believed what he preached.
He was as sure of the existence of
God and Heaven as he was of his
own presence on earth. Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob, Moses and St.
Peter were as real to him in their
angelic robes as were the people
who appeared physically before his
eyes. He was sure also of his own
salvation; he knew he would go to
Heaven.
Compared with the brain of Rob
ert G. Ingersoll, the brain of "Billy"
may have been an inferior instru
ment of thought, but what would
'Ingersoll have given for "Billy's"
unquestioning faith; Ingersoll
achieved fame as the great agnostic
because his intellectual honesty
would not permit him to affirm what
he could not prove. But yearning
almost pathetically, he hoped; and
once, at his brother's grave, he gave
this tragic utterance to that hope:
"Life is a narrow vale between
the cold and barren peaks of two
eternities. We strive in vain to
look beyond the heights. We cry
aloud, and the only answer is the
echo of our wailing cry. From the
voiceless lips of the unreplying
dead there comes no word, but in
the night of death hope sees a star,
and listening love can hear the rus
tle of a wing."
Ingersoll wanted to believe; "Bil
ly" Sunday believed. Which was
the more fortunate? If it were
possible to implant in every heart
the certainty that "Billy" possessed,
it would be the greatest blessing
that could be conferred upon man
kind. Copyright. 1935. K.F.S.
from OSC to spend his junior year !
at Lingnan university. Canton, Chi- I
na. He has written to friends here
that there is considerable military
nnti,.it., : ,,u i .v....
i i.y in suuul iiiiia auu uiai
the strategy seems to be to hamper
and delay Japan long enough to al
low China's preparedness campaign
to gain further momentum. China
feels that given more time she will
present a powerful united front
against Japan, Fisk writes.
Try a G. T. Want Ad when you
have something to sell.
SCHOOL MEETING SET.
Considerable progress has been
made toward arranging the adult
night school classes. All persona
who are interested in enrolling for
one or more of the courses are re
quested to be present at 7 o'clock
Monday evening at the high school
building. Final arrangements will
then De completed. Since it Is re
quired that a certain quota be
reached, it is imperative that all
those interested be present at this
meeting.
and Robert Botts.
Officers elected for the following
year in class '35 were Clifford Yar
nell, pesident; Howard Eubanks,
vice-president; Ellen Nelson, secretary-treasurer.
Other members
present were Bryce Keene, Lloyd
Morgan, Harriet Heliker, Hazel
Padberg, Eva Swanson and Dot
Crabtree. Each member related
what he had been doing since school
was out last May.
Invited guests included Mildred
Lundell, Guyla Cason, Nola Keith
ley, Charlotte McCabe, Miiam Hale.
MOW
You can have that Suit or Overcoat you have
been wanting. Our entire stock of
Curlee Clothes
REDUCED
Suits for Men and Young Men in szes from
36 to 44 All good styles and patterns.
Suits 24.5Q now$l9.5Q
O'Coats $24.50 now I9.5Q
These Suits and Overcoats on sale for a
short time only
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS SALE NOW
AND SAVE!
WILSON'S
THE STORE OF PERSONAL SERVICE
Lucy Montgomery, Eugene Nor
moyle, Bert Mason, Jr., and Louis
Halvorsen.
After a pleasant evening of play
ing games and singing songs, the
hosteses served apple pie a la mode
and coffee. Both classes look for
ward to meeting their fellow mem
bers in class reunions in 1936.
OSC Student Sees Chinese Drama.
Corvallis. An Oregon student,
Gradon Fisk of Maplewood, is hav
ing a close-up view of the tense in
ternational developments between
China and Japan. Fisk is an ex
change student this year, going
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"LETS BE 1936!'
Ieis agree that our telephone is
i coming back, right there. Let's
hear its friendly voice again. Let's
have the feeling of protection that
it gives. Let's be ready for good news.
Telephone service costs so little and
does so much that we must not go
another day without it!"
A representative trill gladly call at
your convenience and describe
the types of service
THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
SPEGDAD.
OR ALL TRUE FAMILV
Qmt th track I Tk throttle I wid open and we are bearing down on you
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10 MODERN MCCHAM1X a MV.
BETTER HOMES UKUir
CHRISTIAN HERALD
FLOWER OROWER
Q HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE . .
McCALL'S MAGAZINE ....
MIDWEST SOLFER ......
MOVIE CLASSIC IVr.
NEEDLECRAFT I Vr.
PATHFINDER (Weekly) . . . . 1 Vr.
PARENTS' MAGAZINE .... 6 Mot.
PICTORIAL REVIEW 1 Yr.
OPEN ROAD (Boyi) 2Yrt.
SCREEN BOOK t Yr.
ROMANTIC STORIES 1 Yr.
TRUE CONFESSIONS lYr.
WOMAN'S WORLD 1 Yr.
CAPPER'S FARMER 1 Yr.
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NOTE Check o o( the following INSTEAD at
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if you wish. Only one Mbstitutjon a) aOowed.
, lYr
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RADIO NEWS (Technical) . . Mo.
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