Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 14, 1937, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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    HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCT. 14, 1937
PAGE FIVE
"Buck" and "Skeet" Bigbee .and
Gordon Smith of Portland arrived
the first of the week on their, way
to the tall timber for a deer hunt in
company with La Verne Van Marter.
Mr. Van Marter was delayed joining
them for a day by illness at Condon
where he is stationed with Jackson
Implement company. The Bigbee
boys, former U. of O. athletes, one
of whom, "Skeet," was a big league
ball player- for many years, have
enjoyed hunting in the local district
of the forest annually for many
years.
Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Barratt depart
ed Tuesday afternoon for Portland
immediately upon Mr. Barratt's re
turn from the east, in answer to word
that W. B. Barratt, Mr. Barratt's
father, was very low. Mr. Barratt
spent three weeks in the east as a
guest of Swift & Co., making a study
of marketing condititons in the live
stock industry.
Mrs. Lucy E. Rodgers, county
school superintendent, left for Salem
Monday afternoon to attend a meet
ing of the state planning board in
connection with library work, ex
pecting also to take in some of the
meeting of state high school princi
pals before returning tomorrow.
Mrs. F. B. Nickerson returned
liome the first of the week from
Portland where she visited at the
home of her son-in-law and daugh
ter, Mr. and Mrs- William Hayes,
and saw her new granddaughter,
Karen Suzanne. She found mother
and babe in good health.
A. E. Jones with the Jones Pack
ard service of Portland, and Mrs.
E. H. Shea and Jack Isom, also of
Portland, will be week end hunting
guests at the Blaine E. Isom home.
Hay and range for sale. Will care
for 350 or 400 head of sheep or will
lease range and sell hay. Range
excellent, plenty of water. J. E.
Craber, Heppner. 29tf.
For sale or trade, Chev. coupe, '31
model in good condition, at a bar
gain. See Ruth Aiken at Lotus
Robison ranch, 1 mi. below Rugg's
on Rhea creek. 30tf.
Al Macomber, state highway main
tenance man, went deer hunting for
the first time Sunday. He returned
that evening with a nice prize.
Mrs. Bert Kane was added to the
list of local huntresses who have
killed their buck when she brought
in a 199-pounder this week.
Dr. J. P. Stewart, Eye Sight Spe
cialist of Pendleton will be at the
HEPPNER HOTEL on WEDNES
DAY, OCTOBER 20th.
Frank Rasmus is visiting in Port
land with his mother who is not
very well. Orve plans to join him
the end of the week.
Mr. and Mrs. John Anglin motored
to Portland Monday to spend two
days in the city on business.
Ambrose Chapin was among for
tunate nimrods the last week, bag
ging a 220-pound buck.
Mrs. Kenneth Bleakman is quite
ill at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
Bleakman in this city.
Fred Parrish is among the baggers
of big bucks. He brought in a 240
pounder this week.
Mrs. Ollie Williams has just re
turned from a short visit at The
Dalles.
MASONIC MEETING NOTICE
1 There will be work in the F. C
F$ degree at the next regular
communication of Heppner Lodge
No. 69. A. F. & A. M., Saturday eve
ning, Oct. 16, announces J. O. Tur
ner, W. M. Also at this time Frank
Sloan, district deputy grand master,
will make an official visit to the
lodge. All members are urged to be
present.
A state grange conference wlil be
held at the Lexington grange hall
all day next Saturday, Oct. 16. A
basket dinner will be served at noon.
Visitors as well as members are in
vited to attend.
uppanaaooii
PATTERSON-GUILD
VOWS EXCHANGED
All Saints' Church Scene of
Morning Wedding; Honeymoon
Follows Nuptial Breakfast
All Saints' Episcopal church was
the scene of a beautiful wedding cer
emony Friday morning when Miss
Mary Patterson, daughter of Mrs. C
C. Patterson, became the bride of
LeGrand Guild. Rev. Ralph V. Hin
kle, archdeacon from Portland, of
ficiated. The bride was given in marriage
by her uncle, J. Osmin Hager. She
wore tailored blue woolen suit with
blue for collar and black accessor
ies, carrying corsage of talisman
rosebuds. Her cousin, ' Miss Harriet
Hager, as maid of honor wore light
gray tailored suit with navy blue
accessories and corsage of pink rose
buds. Earl T. Fulkerson was best man,
and Miss Juanita Leathers played
the wedding march. Only immediate
members of the family were present.
Wedding breakfast was served at
the Lucas Place following the cere
mony. Those present were Mr. and
Mrs. Guild, Mrs. C. C. Patterson,
Rev. Ralph V. Hinkle, Mr. and Mrs.
J. Osmin Hager, Miss Harriet Hager,
James and Homer Hager, Mr. and
Mrs. Claude Graham, Miss Juanita
Leathers, Earl T. Fulkerson, Millard
D. Rodman and James L. Gault.
Immediately after the breakfast
the newlyweds left by motor for
Portland for a short wedding trip.
They will make their home here,
while Mr. Guild continues his work
as agronomist with the soil conser
vation service and Mrs -Guild re
tains her work as assistant to Mr.
Gault, receiver for local banks.
CLUBBERS RETURN
FROM PORTLAND
Awilda Bleakney, Elwynne Peck
Enjoy Bank's Hospitality in
Attending P. I. Exposition
Morrow county's outstanding 4-H
club girl and boy, Awilda Bleakney,
Boardman, and Ellwynne Peck, Lex
ington, returned home last Wednes
day from a three-day visit to the
Pacific International exposition
which was their award as winners
in The First National Bank of Port
land Achievement and Leadership
contest for this district.
Portland proved a hospitable city,
the two reported, and the entire
group of 74, guests of the bank, re
ceived every courtesy.
In addition to daily Pacific Inter
national visits, high points of the
party were a 4-H club banquet in
Penney hall on the exposition
grounds Monday night, the 4-H pa
rade and horse show which followed,
scenic tours of Portland, and a spec
ial dinner and dance Tuesday eve
ning. On Wednesday they attended
the 4-H auction of fat stock before
returning home.
Three of four outstanding Oregon
4-H young people chosen by club
leaders at the state fair in Septem
ber were members of the bank
group. They were Geraldine deLan
cey, Corvallis; Claire McClain, Leb
anon, and Robert Zielinski, Salem
The fourth was LaVerne White
head of Turner. Many of the boys
arid girls went home with prizes
won on exposition exhibits in both
4-H and open classes.
"From all indications, the party
was a great success," a bank official
reported. "Each guest represented his
county in a manner that reflected
honor to his club mates at home. The
First National bank was .fortunate
to have made the acquaintance of
these admirable young people."
SUMMER RANGE GOOD
Stock are all out of the local dis
trict of the Umatilla National for
est, announces F. F. Wehmeyer,
ranger, having left the summer feed
ing grounds in the best condition of
any time in the last ten year period
Higher water table and more abund
ant feed prevailed than for many
years.
MISS VALLIS JONES
WEDS MILTON MAN
Norman Washburn Takes Local
Girl as Bride in Charming
Ceremony at Home of Parents
The country home of Mr. and
Mrs. C. N. Jones was the scene of
a charming wedding cremony at 2
o'clock Sunday afternoon when their
daughter, Miss Vallis, was given
in marriage to Mr. Norman Wash
burn of Milton-Freewater. Alvin
Kleinfeldt, Christian minister, per
formed the ceremony.
The bride wore blue suit with
grey accessories and carried bouquet
of talisman rose buds. Her sister,
Miss Lois Jones, was maid of honor.
She wore grey suit and carried bou
quet of pink rosebuds. Lemuel
Washburn, brother of the bride
groom, was best man. Thirty-five
persons, all relatives and close
friends, were present
Mrs. Paul Jones and Miss Lorena
Wilson poured for the reception fol
lowing the ceremony.
The young couple departed for
Milton immediately after the cere
mony, expecting to leave shortly for
California to make, their home for
the winter.
Among out of town guests were
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Nokes of Albany,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dexter, Mrs.
Washburn and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Towler and two children, Henry
Ford and Lemuel Washburn, all of
Milton-Freewater.
Supervisors Start
Compliance Check
The fall compliance checkup for
the Agricultural Conservation pro
gram is getting under way today
with five supervisors in the field-
Yesterday, E. H. Miller, chairman of
the county committee, and Jack
Parsons, assistant secretary, held a
supervisors' school at the county
agent's office to acquaint all super-
THE;
STAR Reporter
FRIDAY- SATURDAY
A THRILL A SECOND
4 i
Richard
wax
THE
M
plus
EASY LIVING .
with Jean Arthur. Edward 5
Arnold and Ray Milland. You
: dont have to be crazy to like
: it, but it helps!
I SUNDAY-MONDAY '
1 Jean Harlow - Clark Gable in I
I SARATOGA
I thriling drama of the race- I
track with Lionel Barry-
more, Frank Morgan, Una I
I Merkel, Walter Pidgeon.
TUES' Your lucky night?
I ONE MILE FROM HEAVEN
with s
I Claire Trevor, Sally Blanc,
Fredi Washington, Douglas
I Fowlcy, Bill Robinson.
Also "Tiger Eyes,'.' chapter 7
of Jungle Menace; and a Com-
I munity Sing in travelogue
I style with "Sidewalks of New
York," "Chicago," "St. Louis I
5 Blues," "Springtime in the
Rockies" for YOU to sing.
I Wed. Thurs., Oct. 20-21 f
BETWEEN TWO WOMEN
s with Franchot Tone, Maureen I
O'SulIivan, Virginia Bruce
(Love vs. Career)
Also News of the Day and
Our Gang
I Mr. and Mrs. James Leach I
(Lxington) are invited to pre-
: sent this coupon at the box- I
office for complimentary ad-
missions. Please use before I
Oct. 21st
Star Theater I
I Heppner, Oregon
visors with regulations of the 1937
program.
Considerable confusion seems to
have arisen among farm operators
as to the payment for trashy sum
merfallow. In the docket this prac
tice is defined as folows: "Trashy
summerfallow. When crop land is
summer falowed in such a manner
as to leave all crop residue on or
near the surface of the soil to pre
vent erosion from wind or water,
and no straw or stubble is burned
or otherwise removed from such
land." In the last analysis, it be
comes the duty of the county com
mittee to detemine whether trashy
summer fallow on a particular place
is genuinely effectuating the pur
poses of the act by controlling wind
or water erosion, or whether having
previously scattered all of this straw
and farming the land during the
summer in such a way that the ma
jor part of the straw is maintained
near the surface, an operator may
be conducting cultural practices on
such land as in the opinion of the
county committee tends to reduce
the effectiveness of the trash in con
trolling blows.
To quote regulations again: "No
person shall be entitled to receive
payment if such person has adopted
any practice tending to defeat any
of the purposes of the 1937 pro
gram." Under this regulation, it
would not only be the committee's
CD
JOHN DEERE
DISK TILLERS
Perhaps we could tell
you in words how strong
a John Deere Disk Tiller
is built, but you really
must see the John Deere
to appreciate its strength.
So we invite you to in
spect the John Deere
when you're in town.
There's a right size for
your tractor, from 4-foot
cutting width up to 9-foot.
with the CATERPILLAR
(There's only one CAT)
Smooth operation, abundant, econom
ical power do your fall cultivating and
seeding thoroughly and evenly.
Killefer Chisels Papck Hay Choppers
Ask about our Used Tractor Bargains
BRADEN-BELL
Tractor 5k Equipment Co.
Morrow County's Own Store
option, but its duty, to consider
carefully practices involved in
handling trashy summer fallow- ,?
NAME BUDGETEERS
The county budget for 1938 will
be drafted at a meeting set for next
Monday. Named to sit with the court
in preparing the coming year's bud
get are David Hynd, Harvey Miller,
Henry Baker, Chas. Jones, , J. F.
Gorham. Proposed inclusion of an
item of not less than $2500 nor more
than $4000 for combatting noxious
weeds will be discussed, according
to announcement by the court.
APPOINTED DEPUTY
The county cuort this week con
firmed the appointment of Miss
Kathryn Parker, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. F. S. Parker, as deputy
clerk to succeed Miss Mary Chaffee
who recently resigned. Miss Parker
is attending Eastern Oregon Normal
school and will assume the duties in
the clerk's office November 1. Miss
Marie Barlow is supplying in the
position in the interim.
A. Q. THOMSON
NEW YORK LIFE AGENT
Residence 102 Court St.
Phone 632
John Deere
Features:
k He&ry-duty, heat-treated
disks.
it Overhead frame prevents
clogging; aids penetra
tion. k Semi-Boating hitch tor easy
oontrol.
ic Inclosed power lift.
k Chilled bearings.
k Quick, easy, depth and
angling adjustments.
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