Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, June 03, 1937, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    t
PAGE TWO HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1937.
Sheepmen Moving
To Summer Ranges;
Some to Montana
Fair Lambing and
Shearing Reported;
Market Slows Up.
IONE NEWS
J. G. Barratt loaded out 28 car
loads of sheep at the local yards
Sunday evening for summer range
near Browning, Mont. The shipment
comprised a special train of woolies
that will craze in the shadows of
the Rockies near Glacier national
park until fall.
Thirty-eight carloads of Krebs
brothers sheep from Cecil are ex
pected to start this week end for the
same point. Another Morrow coun
ty grower expected to use the Mon
tana range this summer is L. D
Neill of Echo, county commissioner.
Sheepmen of the county generally,
having completed a good average
lambing and taken a fair clip of
wool, have started or are preparing
to start their sheep to summer range
D. O. Justus and sons were among
the first to get under way for the
mountains, starting a band Friday
for the Greenhorns. Fred Hoskins
finished delivering a band to the
mountains near La Grande on Mon
day.
Fair range conditions prevailed
over the county for the lambing and
shearing operations, with stock going
into the summer range in generally
good condition. Some lambing losses
were reported due to late storms
and scours, but increases averaged
from 60 to 80 percent. A few grow
ers reported as high as 90 percent
increase.
The active market in wool and
lambs which existed for a time ear
lier in the season brought average
returns to the grower of 30 cents for
wool and 7 to 8 cents for lambs. The
market has since slowed up, with
buyers generally inactive. ,
There is nothing in the market
situation to cause alarm, reports R.
A. Ward, manager of Pacific Coop
erative Wool Growers, in the cur
rent issue of Oregon Lambs and
Wool, official publication of . Oregon
Wool Growers association. He re
ported wool stocks of the country
at the lowest level since 1920, and'
with consumption heavy for the first
three months of the year, a contin
ued good demand appears likely.
Quoting from the Boston Transcript,
he said, "Dealers look for tempor
ary fluctuations in the wool market
tending to a little lower level, fol
lowed by a resumption of the ad
vance in early fall.
Blaine E. Isom and father-in-law,
Henry Struve of Pendleton, return
ed Monday evening from an over-the-holiday
fishing excursion to
Crooked river and East lake. They
encountered poor luck due to cold
weather. They estimated passing
15 cars with boats going into East
lake.
Norman Swanson
To Tour South Seas
By MARGARET BLAKE
Mrs. J. E. Swanson who has been
visiting her daughter, Mrs. Elmo
McMillan, in Salem, came home Sun
day with her son, Norman. The
young man, who is employed by an
auditing firm in Portland, has taken
two-months leave of absence and
plans to leave soon on a tour of the
Hawaiian islands and the South Sea
islands.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles McElligott
and their children attended the grad
uation of their son Donald from Bea-
verton high school last week.
Billy Blake has. returned to his
home in Heppner after visiting on
the E. J. Blake farm.
Joel Engelman and his father,
Frank Engelman, returned Saturday
from a business trip to Portland.
Mrs. O. G. Haguewood and infant
son returned from the hospital at
Heppner Thursday. '
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Yarnell and
son Alton attended the graduation of
Mr. Yarnell's nephew at Bickleton,
Wash., last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bergevin and
daughter, Betty, attended the grad
uation of their son Denward from
Gonzaga high school at Spokane,
Thursday. Mr. Bergevin's parents
joined them at Gibbon and made the
trip also.
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Blake and chil
dren are spending a tew days in
Portland and vicinity, visiting rela
tives and attending to business mat
ters.
Mrs. Ida Moore arrived from Port
land Friday. She has been with her
daughter. Mrs. Wrex Hicock all win
ter, but plans to remain at her home
here for a while.
John Conway, a teacher in the
Jordan Valley high school, and Mrs.
Conway arrived Saturday for a visit
at the home of Mr. Conway's sister,
Mrs. Hugh Smith. Mr. and Mrs.
Smith, who have been at Ritter Hot
springs, returned home Friday.
Walter S. Smith visited here Fn
day and Saturday. He has been in
Seattle the last two months, visiting
a brother and sister. Mr. Smith is
former resident of this vicinity,
guest of her mother, Mrs. Ethel
Ritchie.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Halvorsen of
Portland visited his sister, Mrs. W.
M. Eubanks, here Saturday.
Miss Florence Mason of The Dalles
is a guest at the home of her aunt,
Mrs. Edward Buschke, at Morgan.
David Rietmann returned from
Hood River Friday, bringing his
wife and little son.
Mr. and Mrs. Rood Ekleberry came
down from the mountains to spend
Memorial day at the home of Mr.
Ekleberry's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
R. L. Ekleberry.
Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Wyatt of Hood
River were over-night guests at the
home of Mr. Wyatt's cousin, R. L.
Ekleberry, at Morgan Saturday night.
They were returning from a trip to
Spokane.
Martin Bauernfeind of Morgan
drove to Portland Saturday and re
turned Monday, bringing his wife
and the children who have been in
the city for a week.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Ingle and chil
dren, Donald and Doris, of Keating,
were over-night guests at the Elmer
Griffith home Monday. Mrs. Ingle
is a niece of Mrs. Griffith.
Three Youngsters
Get Gun Prizes
Bobby Wright, Dick Wilkinson
and Colleen Kilkenny are the three
happy youngsters who walked off
with the prizes in the Morrow Coun
ty Hunters and Anglers crow-magpie
extermination contest for chil
dren under 16 years old. Bobby
Wright, with 1392 points to his cred
it, was high and received the 400
gauge shotgun given by Gilliam &
Bisbee and Green's hardware stores.
Dick Wilkinson, in second place with
1382 points, received the .22 rifle
given by B. R. Patterson, while Col
leen Kilkenny in third place with
720 points received the .22 rifle given
by Dr. A. D. McMurdo. The young
sters scored 5648 points in all. Other
scores were:
Kemp Dick 500, Donald Wehmeyer
349, Donald Evans 176, Doyl Keys
159, Douglas Drake 156, Wade Both-
well 141, Donald Evans 179, Eugene
Massey 70, Billie Padberg 70, Paul
Doolittle 71, Jack Morton 68, Claud
Way 59, Rufus Hill 48, Donald Fred
erickson 58, Glen Coxen 14, Howard
Gilliam 12, Donald Munkers 13, John
Skuzeski 6, Herbert Schunk 5.
NEILL-AKERS.
Miss Mary Oleta Neill, daughter of
Mrs. Ollie Neill, became the bride of
Wilson Dale Akers, young Eightmile
farmer, at the Christian parsonage
in this city, Tuesday afternoon, Alvin
Kleinfeldt performing the ceremony.
The young couple were acocmpan
ied by Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Berg
strom. They will make their home
on the Akers farm in Eightmile fol
lowing a short wedding trip. Mrs.
Akers, who was reared near Pine
City, taught in the Eightmile school
last year.
Miss Beatrice Thomson came up
from Portland the end of the week
to visit with her mother, Mrs. A. Q.
Thomson.
but now lives in Pendleton.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Howell and
daughters, Sybil and Dorothy, of
Pomeroy, Wash., spent the Memorial
day holiday visiting friends here.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Ekleberry and
children have returned from a week
spent with Mrs. Eklebery's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Chandler, at Leb
anon. J. P. Louy returned Friday from
Seattle where he has been visiting
his daughter and receiving medical
attention.
Horace Addis, representing the
East Oregonian, spent a few days
here this week.
Albert ' Lindstrom of Morgan who
has been a patient at the hospital
in Hood River, returned home Wed
nesday. He is considerably improved
in health.
Mrs. Franklin Lindstrom of Mor
gan has returned home after spend
ing a few days in Portland, the
ow
I Millions of more homes can
have a genuine G-E Refrigerator
THE WEI1
int.
REFRIGERATORS
iViWiVAVAWMM1
.v.v.w,v.v4kvij.j-'.fc'!-"-
Pacific Power & Light Company
Always at Your Service
Bmiimmini'iiiiiiiim1"
IHtltllltll litll X1U1
1
WOULDN'T CALL MARIAN
EXTRAVAGANT POR BUYING
AN ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR
in CALL HEH TWKin m
i
SHE'S WISE TO BUY NOW BECAUSE:
1
ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR PRICES
ARE STILL LOW, BUT ADVANCES
ARE EXPECTED. THE 1937 DESIGNS
ARE SO LOVELY, TOO.
THE NEW MODELS OFFER BOTH
INCREASED EFFICIENCY AND
CONVENIENCE NEW FEATURES
ARE OUTSTANDING.
HER ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR
WILL PAY FOR ITSELF THROUGH
SAVINGS IN QUANTITY BUYING
AND LEFT-OVERS.
k
Urn
PACIFIC POWER & LIGHT COM
PANY'S NEW RATES-LOWER THAN
EVER BEFORE MAKE THE OPERAT
ING COST LESS THAN 3c A DAY!
Plan to have an All-Electric kitchen
Electric Refrigeration and Electric Cooking cost
so little at Pacific's new low rates!
The modern kitchen and the kitchen you want-
is all-electric! It has an electric refrigerator, an elec
tric range and automatic hot water service. Plan your
all-electric kitchen now and work towards its com
pletion as you buy equipment. (Present appliance
prices are still low and values were never greater.)
You live in a community where electricity is really
cheap. You can get an abundance of it for a few cents
a day. Pacific Power & Light Company's rates have
been steadily reduced until they are now among the
lowest in the United States.
SEE ANY DEALER IN ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT
or PACIFIC POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
Always at Your Service