PAGE SIX HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1937. THE Hehisch Published by the Journalism Class of Heppner High School Editor Marvin Casebeer Assistant Andrew Shoun Grade and Class News Gladys Casebeer Did You Know That? La Verne Van Marter Band News Clayton Wright Personality Evelyn Kirk Humor, Ruth Green, Gerald Cason Baseball Riley Munkers Girls' League Arlene Morton Brain Buster Bill Irwin Guess Who Maxine McCurdy H.H.S. Baseball Practice Started Tuesday night saw the Heppner high school baseball team again out on the field to start another big sea son. There are many of the veter ans back from last year, among them being La Verne Van Marter at first base, Len Gilman as pitcher, Riley Munkers at short stop, Charles Cox and Joe Aiken in the outfield. Willie Stone, a sophomore who failed to turn out last year, is working hard to take the catching position which was left vacant due to the gradua tion of Howard Bryant. There are several others who are working hard for positions on the team. Most of the first week will include getting the arms loosened up and batting practice. Harder work will follow next week. In the past two years Heppner has played thirteen games and lost but one. This is a very good record, consideringt that there had been no baseball team for sev eral years previous to 1935. They hope to have as good a record this year as they have had the past two, and with support from the town peo ple and the student body they will have. There are also several fellows turning out for the track team, with two track men, Norton King and Len Gilman, back from last year. They and several of the others have already started the strenuous task of getting into shape for the com ing track meets. H.H.S. HUMOR Did anyone happen to notice The romantic mood of Clayton Wright at the show Saturday night? (Cupid sure hit him.) That spring is just around the corner of the building? (It must be a round building.) The side show at the Green resi dence? (Featuring knobs.) . Nick names La Verne Van Marter, "Barrelhead" Riley Munkers "Muddy" Charles Cox , "Romeo" Don Turner "Ace" Gerald Roberts "Jeep" Vernon Knowles "Muggey" Ellis Williams "Alice" Arlene Morton "Salty" Dora Bailey "Adora-ble" Marjorie Parker.... "Giggling Gertie" Delsie Harshman "Cupid" Paul Brown "Dangerous Dan Magrew" Kathryn Parker .... "Klondike Kate" Fred Hoskins "Fritz Huzzykins" Bill Browning "Red Sails in the Sunset" Joe Aiken "Shiek" Andy Davidson "The Peeping Tom Detective" Billy Irwin "Bird Legs" H.H.S. "Ag" Class Surveying Tennis Courts The Agricultural classes are sur veying and drawing contour maps of the piece of ground south of the gym. It is necessary that the ground be leveled before construction can be started on the tennis courts. The freshman agricultural cla'ss is working on its project books so as to have them in order before their chicks arrive the latter part of the week. The F. F. A. is preparing for the scetional contest at Condon, which will be held March 26. Now that spring is here, the class will be taking many field trips. Live stock judging will be the main issue taken up. As forty per cent of the agricul ture boys have to participate in Home Beautification, 654 trees have been sent for. H.H.S. Girls' League Party On Friday, March 12, from seven thirty to ten-thirty, the Girls' league entertained the student body with a dance. The music was provided by Marjorie Parker, Norton King, Gerald Cason and Buddy Blakely. During intermission the high school mixed quartet gave two musical numbers. Refreshments were served. The gymnasium was effectively decorated with green and white streamers, and dimly lighted by lamps in forms of shamrocks. -A large group attended, including teachers, students, and several mem bers of the alumnae. H.H.S. Band Concert Saturday Afternoon The band will appear on Main street Saturday at 2 o'clock. Sev eral marches will be played. The band has taken every spare minute for practice in hope of winning high recognition at Corvallis. With the cooperation of the band students and the student body their chances for. success are excellent. H.H.S. Brain Buster A Mathematician in Service Mr. Watson kept his liquor on re volving shelves in his cellar. On one of the shelves where he kept his favorite champagne there were sev enty-two bottles arranged in eight compartments, nine bottles in each, Distrusting the servants in his home, he would descend to the cellar each night before going to bed and count the bottles on each shelf. Not bothering to note the number of bottles in each compartment, he would merely count the totals along each side. He thus counted twenty seven each way on the champagne shelf. A crafty servant worked out a way of deceiving his master and making some money on the outside by stealing champagne. He took four bottles and rearranged the re mainder so that his employer would still count twenty-seven each way. How did he rearrange the bottles and for how many nights could he continue to take four bottles each time befpre his formula ran out? The answer to last week's Brain Buster is that the night watchman had told the vice-president that he had a dream the night before, and night watchmen are supposed to be awake at night. H.H.S. Personality Harold W. Buhman, principal of the Heppner grade school, was brought up in Canby, Oregon. He went to grade school and high school at Canby. Graduating from the Canby high school he finished at Oregon State normal. He has at tended summer school both at the University of Oregon and the Uni versity of Washington. He taught at Drain, Oregon, before coming to Heppner where he has held the po sition of grade school principal for six years. HHS . PINTO-POINTS From all reports, the Heppner grade school basketball quintet showed the teams at Arlington a few tricks about basketball. They won their three games with com parative ease, the closest being the 18-16 win over Rufus; but in this game most of the opponent's scoring was piled up against the local's subs. The trophy awarded them was the first they have had the honor of winning, ad naturally their proud ness stands out. They are a young group of basketeers whose ventures in high school basketball should be of great success. An interesting feature of the all star selection was the fact that a Heppner boy made the team, al though he made only one basket during the three games in which he and his teammates participated. This proves that high-point men are not always the only outstanding hoop sters. Feed him the ball, and any player will run up a score, but a two-point in three-games man must show signs of being a basketballer, and evidently the all-star selectors thought that of Harry O'Donnell. Above grade school basketball comes high school, and there'll be plenty of it at Salem the latter part of this week. It's a tough proposi tion, that of picking the state champ, with Astoria, Eugene, Mac-Hi, Mc- Minnville, La Grande and Franklin of Portland all gunning for the title. Astoria, whose trip to Salem this year makes it their 15th in 17 years and their eleventh straight, looks to be the best bet, but if Mac Hi gets over La Grande in her first game, the Pioneers will make it tough for any teams standing in the way of the state title. Don't forget McMinn ville! Next comes the college casabers. The northern division championship is at stake next Saturday when Ore gon takes on Washington State at Pullman, and with those two quints fighting for such a title, the game promises to be a rough one. It's a promise that the referee will excuse someone from the game, and the first team to lose a player via the foul route will end' up in the second notch of the northern division. The reason for Washington unsuc cessfully defending her title this year, at least one of them, is one that even this writer can solve; so its depth doesn't go very far. The University of Washington has a team of individualists; a team that placed three men on the northern division all-star; a team that would end up in third place. Coach Edmundson will no doubt put forth his best efforts to obtain a five-man team for the next season. If scholastc difficulties and the moving problem had not confronted them, Lexington high would have had a more successful basketball season, so stated the Lexington ath letic manager through conversation with him. Bill Burchell and Keith Gentry both moved to other sections of the state, and La Verne Wright left school. With Wright and Gen try as forwards; Palmer, center; and Peck and Burchell holding down the guard positions, this "wished-for" Lexington team could give any of the surrounding teams a good run for their money. With next week's edition comes the last installment of basketball, so bear with me till next week, at which time the ending episode will be giv en. It s a promise! H.H.S. Do You Know That Tests on 14,844 Minneapolis school students revealed that the flat- chested ones were more intelligent than the full-chested? The flat chested were also usually heavier, taller, and less prone to tubercu losis. Wood ticks the kind you find on your dog can live for three or four years without food? Citizens of Boston pay more for brown eggs than white, but New Yorkers willingly pay more for white? (It's just a matter of local prejudice.) Social leaders of America receive more than a million dollars a year for advertising testimonials? The Vanderbilt name brings the highest price. Bears and moose are increasing in numbers instead of decreasing as is commonly supposed? Officials take the bear census by studying tracks at the edge of salmon streams and learning to know each bear's foot prints. Scientists have revived animals suffering from electric shock by giv ing them a counter-shock? Southern engineers are now using cotton in road building? A University of Kentucky basket ball player scored thirty-four points in thirty-four minutes against Creighton last year? PINE CITY By BERNICE WATTENBURGER Mr. Yeager of Pendleton spent Wednesday at Pine City school. He is Umatilla county school superin tendent. Miss Dora E. Moore spent the week end in' Portland shopping. Lucy E. Rodgers visited at the Pine City school this week. Mrs. Bert Young, Mrs. Wilma Roberts were callers at H. E. Young's Saturday. A number of people from Butter creek attended the show "Stowaway" in Hermiston Sunday. Mable and Elsie Rauch had some dental work done in Hermiston Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Lon Wattenburger were Pendleton callers Thursday. School was closed a half day Fri day so the teachers could attend a teachers' meeting in Lexington. Mr. and Mrs. Roy J. Pinson spent the week end in Salem visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Jones. Mrs. Jones is very ill. W. J. Wattenburger of Echo was a caller at the H. E. Young home Monday. Mrs. Robert Smith spent the week end with her folks in Irrigon. Dinner guests at the E. B. Watten burger home Tuesday evening were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Ray J. Pinson. Visitors at the Fred Rauch home Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Julian Rauch and family, Mrs. Frank Helms and daughters and J. T. Ayers. Hermiston callers Friday were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neill, Mrs. Lucy O' Brien, Mr. and Mrs. Otis McCarty, Mrs. Bert Young, Mrs. Laura Mc Carty, Mrs. Wilma Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Wattenburger, and H. E. Young. Miss Dora E. Moore, Miss Mary Daly, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Watten burger and family were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith in Irrigon Sunday eve ning. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gorger and family were business visitors in town Monday from the farm north of lone. Mr. Gorger was checking up with the county agent on trashy summerfallow practices, having changed over to this method of wheat farming on his large tractor-operat ed holdings. Professional Directory A. D. McMurdo, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Trained Nurse Assistant - Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon Morrow County Abstract & Title Co. INC. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE TITLE ESSimAIfCE Office New Peters Building P. W. Mahoney ATTORNEY AT LAW GENERAL INSURANCE Heppner Hotel Building Willow St. Entrance S. E. Notson ATTORNEY AT LAW Rooms 2-3 First National Bank Building Heppner, Oregon F. W. Turner & Co. FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Line Companies. Real Estate Heppner, Oregon Jos. J. Nys ATTORNEY AT LAW Peters Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon Laurence Case Mortuary "Just the service wanted when you want It most" Elmer Griffith WHEAT BUYER Representing Kerr-Gifford & Co. Buying in Heppner, Lexington, lone. Call 11F3, lone, Oregon Phelps Funeral Home Telephone 1332 Licensed Funeral Directors Trained Lady Assistant Heppner, Oregon J. 0. Turner ATTORNEY AT LAW Phone 173 Hotel Heppner Building HEPPNER, ORE. Dr. Raymond Rice PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Office First National Bank Building Office Phone 523 House Phone 823 Heppner Abstract Co. J. LOGIE RICHARDSON, Mgr. BATES REASONABLE Roberts Building -Heppner, Ore. Dr. J. H. McCrady DENTIST X-Bay Diagnosis . GILMAN BUILDING Heppner, Ore. J. 0. Peterson Latest Jewelry and Gift Goods Watches - Clocks - Diamonds Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon Vawter Parker ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Phone 173 Heppner Hotel Building Dr. Richard C. Lawrence DENTIST Modern equipment including X-ray for dental diagnosis Extraction by gas anesthetic First National Bank Building Phone 562 Heppner, Ore. Dr. L. D. Tibbies OSTEOPATHIC Physician & Surgeon FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLDG. Res. Phone 1162 Office Phone 492 HEPPNER, OREGON Heppner Transfer Co. Anywhere For Hire Hauling Bonded and Insured Carrier ROBT. A. JONES, Mgr. V. R. Runnion AUCTIONEER Farm Sales and Livestock a Specialty 405 Jones Street, Heppner, Ore. Phone 452 MAKE DATES AT MY EXPENSE Frank C. Alfred Attorney at Law Telephone 442 Rooms 3-4 First National Bank Building HEPPNER, OREGON Peterson & Peterson ATTORNEYS AT LAW U. S. National Bank Building PENDLETON, OREGON Practice In State and Federal Courts Real Estate General Line of Insurance and Bonds W. M. EUBANKS Notary Publlo 62 lone, Ore. Phone W. L. Blakely Representing Connecticut Mutual Life Insuranoa Co., Caledonian Fire Insurance Co. HIGHEST CASH PRICES FOR WOOL HIDES PELTS Phone 782 Heppner. Ore.