HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1937. PAGE FIVE L(oral Eli Mrs. R. K. Drake returned to the farm home in Sand Hollow the end of the week, improved in health after undergoing treatment for sev eral days in a Pendleton hospital. Mr. Drake, whose son Douglas plays center, went to Arlington with the grade school basketball team Sat urday, seeing them through to the championship of the district tour nament. The American Legion Auxiliary will hold a social and sewing meet ing at the home of Mrs. Harry Tam "blyn Tuesday afternoon, March 23, at 2 o'clock. At this meeting plans for the American Legion and aux iliary party will be completed. Emil Carlson, in from Gooseberry Tuesday morning, reported a heavy rain there Monday night. Rain and snow intermingled to give the ground a good soaking, and Mr. Carlson be lieved it would be a big help in bringing the grain along. Among visitors at the court house Monday morning were noted Mrs. Ralph Jones, Butter creek; Elmer Palmer, Eight Mile; Henry Smouse, lone; Mrs. Elsie M. Beach, Lexing ton. Lotus Robison was among Rhea creek ranchers in the city Monday. Fields in his section have been get ting a good soaking, with prospects bright for the first crop of hay, Mr. and Mrs. Walter La Dusire visited relatives and friends in Hepp ner Saturday, responding to word of the critical condition of Mrs. La Du sire's brother, W. H. Turner. George Peck, county commission er, was forced to lay off seeding Tu .esday by the rain, and took advan tage of the opportunity to catch up on official duties in Heppner. Frank Young was in the city from the Dry Fork section Tuesday and reported the ground too wet to work that morning, following the big rain of Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. Laxton McMurray were business visitors here Satur day from lone. Growing conditions -were reported good on their Jordan Siding farm. Henry Baker, in town Saturday from Gooseberry, reported a heavy snowstorm in his section the night before, moisture from which was welcomed. Ralph Butler, up from the Ewing ranch Tuesday, reported he had been irrigating for four days and believed prospects good for the first hay crop. Mary Ruth arrived to Mr. and Mrs. Cornett Green at the maternity home of Mrs. P. A. Mollahan, Tues day morning, weighing 8 pounds. Mr. and Mrs. Van De Walker of Salem were over-Thursday-night guests at the home of Mrs. Minnie B. Furlong in this city. Mrs. Josie Jones returned home the end of the week from a visit in Portland with her daughter, Mrs. Harold Stiles. Tiill TWiortv was a Viusinpss vis itor in the city Monday from Alpine 1 - III - 11 where spring worn is geumg weu under way. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Anderson and baby were in town Tuesday af ternoon from the Gooseberry farm. Archie Ball was doing business in the city Monday from the San ford canyon farm. Mr. and Mrs. John Bergstrom were among Eight Mile people calling in the city Monday. Lawrence Palmer was transacting business in the city baturday irom Lexington. James P. Farley was a visitor in the city Monday from the farm at Willows. Mrs. Carl Peterson was a visitor in the city Monday from the lone section. Mrs. Floyd Worden was a visitor in the city Monday from Eight Mile. IONE By MARGARET BLAKE The Women's Auxiliary of lone post of the American Legion met in its room in the Legion hall Satur day afternoon. Alice Katherine Nichoson and Marianne Corley were initiated as junior members of the auxiliary. Members of the junior auxiliary were instructed in knitting by Mrs. Fred Mankin. After the business meeting refreshments were served by Mrs. M. E. Cotter and Mrs. E. G. Sperry. Mrs. Ellen Rieth had the misfor tune to catch her left hand in the wringer of an electric washing ma chine while helping with the family laundry last Thursday and had her arm and hand badly lacerated. She is in the hospital at Heppner. The Women's Topic club met at the home of Mrs. Elmer Griffith last Saturday afternoon for the March study meeting. The subject for the afternoon was "The Indian On and Off the Reservation" and dealt with the Indian wars in connection with the early development of Oregon and the placing of the Indians on reser vations later. Mrs. Elmer Griffith read a paper prepared by Mrs. Inez Freeland, an absent member of the hostess committee, and Mrs. Griffith and Mrs. Clyde Denny each gave interesting facts concerning both past and present day tribes and res ervations to which they were allot ted. Mrs. Bert Mason as chairman of the library committee gave an in teresting report for the year 1936. After the meeting delicious refresh ments were served by Mrs. Denny and Mrs. Griffith. The social meet ing for March will be at the home of Mrs. Denny on the afternoon of Saturday, March 20. Rev. Ralph Hinkle, Episcopal mis sionary, will hold services at the Baptist church next Sunday morn ing. Miss Guyla Mae Cason arrived at the home of Mrs. Lana Padberg last Thursday morning. She is recover ing satisfactorily from her recent operation. Mr. and Mrs. James Townsend and two sons arrived Saturday for a short visit with Mrs. Townsend's father, John Louy. They live in Seattle. The lone Public library which was started last year under the sponsorship of the Women's Topic club has shown a good healthy growth in the addition of books and also in the interest taken in it by the general public. It was established on January 6, 1936, and was at first given help by the Umatilla library which loaned it several hundred vol umes with which to start. It has received as gifts and loans 446 books and during 1936 it purchased 26. The state library makes it a loan of 250 volumes each six months. During the year 1936 a total of 3207 volumes were loaned to 185 borrow ers. This number of borrowers in cludes 84 rural people. It is thought this number of people who use the library would be somewhat larger if all who used the books had cards, since several members of one fam ily often use one card. The library was moved into per manent quarters in the store of Bert Mason during the summer of 1936. Mr. Mason donated the space used and the Topic club used a part of the funds raised by silver teas to partition off comfortable quarters and put in an adequate number of shelves. The library is open two afternoons, Tuesday and Friday, each week from two until five. Two mem bers of the club give their time to caring for the library on these days. A library committee of five mem bers elected by the club have charge of library affairs. They are Mrs. Bert Mason, chairman; Mrs. Werner Rietmann, sec-treas.; Mrs. Carl F. Feldman, Mrs. Walter Corley and Mrs. Laxton McMurray. Since the library report was pre pared the club has purchased 52 volumes some of which have been placed on the shelves while others of the number will come later. The following new books are now avail able: Adult books "The Lost Wa gon Trail," Grey; "111 Met by Moon light," Ford; "Kidnap Murder Case," Vance; "Black Acres," Payne; "The River of Skulls," Marsh; "Rome Haul," Edmonds; "Come and Get It," Ferber; "Lorna Doone," Blackmore; "The Little Minister," Barrie; "The Last of the Plainsmen," Grey; "The Horsemen of the Plains," Altsheler; "Glengarry School Days," Connor. Children's books "Scarecrow of Oz," "Cowardly Lion of Oz" and "Tin Woodman of Oz," Baum; "Helen's Babies," Habberton. et Babies," Habberton; 'A Dog of Flan ders," de la Rame; "Toby Tyler," Otis; "When Patty Went to College," Webster; "Moby Dick," Melville; "Boy Scouts of Bob's," Burton; "Two Little Savages, Seton; "My Friend the Dog," Terhune; "Johnny and Jimmy Rabbit," Serl; "Life of a Wooden Doll," Saxby; "Overall Boys," Grover; "Uncle Remus and the Little Boy," Harris; "Punch and Robinette," Gate; "The Stuffed Par rott," Fillmore; "Danish Fairy and Folk Tales," Bay; "Willie Fox's Di ary," Hilkene & Gugle; "King Ar thur and His Knights," Knowles; "Captain Pete of Puget Sound," Wheeler; "Inger Johannes Lively Doings," Zwilgmeyer, "Spinning Wheel Stories," Alcott; "Polly Oli ver's Problem," Wiggen; "African Adventure Stories," Loring; "The Turned About Girls," Oix. Bert Johnson motored to Port land. He was accompanied by Jack Farris. The high school student body gave a benefit dance at the Dry Fork hall to raise money to pay off its indebt edness. The affair was a financial success. The Lexington high school stu dent body invited the lone high school student body to a party at Lexington last Friday evening. Games and dancing were enjoyed and delicious refreshments were served. Those from lone who en joyed the hospitality of the Lex ington students were Mignonette Perry, Katherine Griffith, Lola Can non, Eleanor and Tommy Everson, Valjean Clark, Bernice Ring, Charles, William and Herbert Davidson, Har old Buchanan, Ruth and Rollo Craw ford, Anna Doherty, Ted Peterson, Merle and Clarence Baker, Joyce Carlson, Bertha Akers and Charlotte McCabe. George Tucker, Miss Fran cis Stewart and Alexander McDon ald accompanied the students. Mr. and Mrs. Allan Learned of Wapato, Wash., were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Balsiger over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Howell and their daughters, Sybil and Dorothy, de parted by car for their new home at Pomeroy, Wash., last Saturday morn ing. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Zielke have moved into the Howell house. Mr. and Mrs. Charles O'Connor who lost their home by fire last fall have purchased the house of Mrs. Chas. Nord in the upper end of town and moved it to their lot and are now settled in their own home once more. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Timm and George Timm of Pendleton were business visitors here Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Blake were here from Kinzua on Sunday and Mon day. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Schlevoight had as dinner guests last Sunday Mrs. P. C. Peterson, Elsie Ball, Mrs. Ralph Ledbetter and daughter Estelle, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Yarnell and son Alton of lone and Mr. Hartfield and daughter of Arlington, Pomona Grange at Rhea Creek, April 3 Morrow County Pomona grange will meet at Rhea Creek, April 3. A business meeting will be called in the forenoon, and the lecturer's pro gram is slated for 1:30 in the after noon. "Roadside Beautification" is the topic of the program and the various granges of the county will furnish numbers for it. Bert John son, county judge, will talk on dump ing rubbish and garbage and what that often means to the roads, road sides and to the county. Joseph Bel anger, county agent, will also be a speaker on the program to which the public is invited. Business will again be resumed in the evening. G. I. Wardrip, Spokane, and Nat Kimball, Pendleton, both with the Federal Land Bank of Spokane, were business visitors at the local office the first of the week. Police Will Attend School at Pendleton Police officers of Heppner have been invited to become students of the latest methods in their work starting March 24 when regular weekly police training classes will get under way in Pendleton accord ing to word received here from Warren C. Hyde, in charge of the courses. The classes, which will be held in 11 cities will be sponsored by the League of Oregon Cities and the bureau of municipal research of the University of Oregon, and will have the cooperation of a number of other organizations. Chief C. E. Lemons will serve as chairman for this area. Officers who have been invited to attend the school in Pendleton in lude the following: R. E. Goad, sher iff, Umatilla county; C. J. D. Bau man, sheriff, Morrow county; Chief F. W. Whiteley, Adams; Chief Leon Miller, Athena; Chief Homer Hayes, Heppner; Chief H. A. Pankow, Her miston; Chief Ed Smith, Pilot Rock; Chief C. D. Walter, Milton; Chief John Hinderman, Freewater; Chief J. A. King, Weston; Chief Ben Gas kill, Echo; Chief J. Gossage, Stan field; Chief M. N. Jenkins, Umatilla; and Chief Tom Justice, Long Creek. The invitation also includes all mem The Junior Class of Heppner High School presents "CRASHING SOCIETY" HUMOROUS COMEDY IN THREE ACTS Gym-Auditorium FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1937 8:00 P. M. Admission: Grade School 15c, High School 25c, Adults 35c THIS ADVERTISEMENT SPONSORED BY FERGUSON MOTOR COMPANY liiuilllliiiiliillllllllliiiiuillilllllliuiiiiiiliiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiuilllliiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimlllllliiiiiiiiilllillli WHOLE OR HALF Free Demonstration All Day Saturday CENTRAL MARKET bers of the staffs in each city. , School for officers will continue for nine weeks, with each class per iod in charge of an expert in some definite phase of peace officer work. Locals Start Even In Telegraphic Shoot Heppner Rod and Gun club with a 74 team score, won one match, lost one and tied one in the opening round of the annual Oregonian tel egraphic trapshooting tournament, Sunday. John Lane and Earl War ner with prefect 25's each and Luke Bibby with 24, were the three high scorers on the first strings of 25 birds to make the team score. Shoot ing takes place each Sunday at the club trap grounds six miles below town on the O.-W. highway. Next Sunday Heppner competes against Silver Falls, Coos county and Hunt ington. Last Sunday's scores of local shooters, for the day, were: A.T. Broke Judge Carmichael 75 68 Mark Merrill 75 61 Phil Mahoney 75 67 A. D. McMurdo 50 48 J. H. McCrady 50 46 Ambrose Chapin , 60 38 Crocket Sprouls 60 45 Luke Bibby 50 47 John Lane w 50 47 JOarl Warner 25 25 Mrs. Bert Kane 25 16 Bernard McMurdo 25 12 Scott McMurdo 25 15 29c