Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 21, 1937, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

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

    PAGE EIGHT
THE
Hehisch
Published by the Journalism Class
of Heppner High School
STAFF
Editor John Crawford
Assistant Editor Thomas Gonty
Pinto Points Paul McCarty
Ten Years Ago Bill Barratt
Humor, Pat Cason, Scott McMurdo
Assembly and Club News, Irena Mc
Ferrin and Alvina Casebeer
Senior Play Bethal Blake
Alumni Joe Aiken
H.H.S.
. Bicycles on the Bridge
Screech ! ! ! "Hey, you get out of
the way!" These are familiar sounds
to people walking down the side
walk below the gym during the noon
hour. The kids with bicycles seem
to try their hardest to see who can
beat the others to Main street in the
shortest length of time. This causes
many thrills and spills during the
course of the semester. If the cyclists
would take the highway down by
the courthouse to get home, they
would make as good time, besides
making it easier on the pedestrians.
Something should be done before
someone is injured on the bridge.
H.H.S.
Stores Cooperate
Last Friday saw the largest turn
out to a local football game in years.
This large turnout was mostly due to
the splendid cooperation of the stores
which closed their doors during the
hours of the game. The students of
Heppner high school wish to express
their appreciation for this cooper
ation and sincerely hope it will con
tinue for future Friday games.
H.H.S.
Senior Play Progressing
Let's not forget the comedy play,
"The White Phantom," to be given
by the senior class as a benefit for
the student body. The play is to be
given October 29 in the auditorium
of the school gymnasium. The boys'
chorus will present a short pro
gram prceding the play.
H.H.8.
Events of the Past
One year ago this week: Two men
from the Soil Conservation corps
showed moving pictures in" regard
to the necessity of soil conservation.
... On arrival of the new tools, the
Smith-Hughes class began planning
and arrangnig their new shop.
Five years ago this week: Letter
men of Heppner high school met at
the gymnasuim Friday evening, at
which time they organied the "H"
club. The newly elected officers
were Roy Gentry, president; Jimmy
Furlong, vice president; Curtis
Thomson, secretary-treasurer. . . .
Pendleton defeated Heppner on the
local gridiron by a score of 12 to 0.
Due to the cooperation of the Pen
dleton band and the students join
ing vigorously in the yells, the game
was made very interesting.
Ten years ago this week: Heppner
won the first conference game with
flying colors when they defeated
Fossil by the score of 39 to 6. . . .
The freshman class of '31 was duly
initiated to the highest degree Friday
night. . . . The favored sophomores
completely overwhelmed the fresh
men by defeating them by a margin
of 780 points in the tradtional class
rush.
H.H.S.
Eighth Grade News
The eighth grade held an election
of officers Monday. The following
were elected: President, Kay Fer
guson; vice-president, Connie In
stone; secretary, Peggy Tamblyn;
reporter, Ellen Hughes; patrolman,
Claud Snow, and librarian, Birdine
Vance. Another meeting will be held
the latter part of the week.
H.H.S.
Girls' League Entertains
A short assembly was given last
Friday by the Girls' League. This
consisted of first, a skit in which
Carolyn Vaughn and Shirley Wilson
represented two high school boys in
their attempts to pick up two "du
ties" from the streets of Heppner ar d
the disastrous results following. Next
Marjorie McFerrin and Betty Rob
inson sang two popular songs. Last
was a very tragic bit of drama called
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCT. 21, 1937
PINTO POINTS
Before last Friday's slightly one
sided Touchet game,, which was
Heppners first inter-state tilt in
many years, there was considerable
controversy concerning the Wash
ington team. The atmosphere was
heavily laden with rumors that their
team would outweigh the bulky
Mustangs, that they were as big and
tough as they come, and their team
was composed of first-class veter
ans. The true side of it was that ev
eryone knew everything but the
whole truth, so help them. However,
their arrival in Heppner on the af
ternoon of the battle revealed some
very startling information. Their
team had as its "veterans" only five
lettermen; the average weight was
several nounds lighter than their
host; and most surprising, their trav
eling squad consisted of a coach,
athletic manager, and exactly twelve
players! Upon seeing that a single
substitute, with the exception of the
manager, was the only one to aid in
maintaining the high spirit of the
coach, all spectators immediately be
gan sympathizing and predicting the
probable forthcoming disastrous re
suits to the only "one -substitute"
team ever to face Heppner. During
the course of the following game,
nary a player was taken from the
rde-shirted Touchet line-up, al
though several times the prevailing
situation, made it seem the wise thing
to do. An "iron-man" team in every
respect; our hats are off to you,
Touchet!
The uncertainty of Heppner's
foitball schedule resulted in the
Mustang's first two games, which
covered the same number of weeks,
being played with the highly pub
licized Condon team. Last year, an
almost identical situation was prev
alent except that the period of time
between games was considerably
shorter and a different school con
stituted the second party. After two
early season tilts, the locals' follow
ing four games were played in as
many weeks, but in this number of
meets, Heppner had met only two
teams, one of them twice in a week's
time. Realizing that such repetition
limits gate receipts, and also keep
ing in mind that to the average foot
ball spectator "variety is the spice
of life," several schools of the sur
rounding territory have scheduled
games in which no team is played
twice in a season, and certainly not
in successive weeks. This year, Her
miston has taken on teams new to
its former schdules, with Arlington
doing the same, forgetting that a
matter of some distance separates
them from new competition. The
game with Touchet was the first
recent foreign one to the Mustang
gridiron menu, and in the hopes of
local fans, surely not the last.
Curfew chatter . . . It, looks as
though Heppner has reached the
long-awaited big-time football, with
new line-markers adorning the field,
an invaluable loud-speaker system,
and large crowds again attending
the games. For a while last week, it
looked as though the Friday's fray
would be played minus one of the
requisites of such a melee, namely
a football . . . two days prior to
scheduled kick-off the new football
which had been purchased for the
game, came up missing . . . however
an extended search brought forth the
necessary semi-circular air-inflated
piece of leather. Lexington's two
scheduled games of six-man foot
ball with Boardman are now a thing
of the deep, dark past . . . the Yel
low Jackets, for some unknown rea
son, have dispensed with that sport,
and in all probability will start prac
tice of the popular indoor sport in
which they always excell, basketball
. . . this Saturday, as a feature event
of the annual Pioneers' Reunion at
Lexington, the Jack Rabbits will
meet the river team from Umatilla
. . . the game is called for 10 a. mj.
The repeated interception of Tou-
chet's passes by Richard Hayes,
Mustang center, spilled their scor
ing dope-bucket several times . .
on one interception, he displayed a
side-stepping stride that makes him
also a possible shifty backfield man.
Riley Munkers, who dropped the ra
dio engineering course which he was
taking at Oregon Institute of Tech
nology in Portland, received a write
up in that school's paper, the Tech'
O-Gram, the contents of which very
few Heppner fans are familiar
to quote the article, "The boy who
gon game was Munkers, a little 140 1
pound speedwagon from Heppner,
It is on this shifty little gent that
Coach Biancone is pinning his
hopes." It was an eastern Oregon boy
who played the outstanding game
at Walla Walla last Friday night, but
it happened that he was playing for
a smaller western Oregon institu
tion, Pacific University, which wal
loped the history-famous Whitman
college 24 to 7 ... a headache to the
Whitman Misionaries, Len Gilman,
three years the star of Heppner ath
letic teams, climaxed the game , with
the return of a Whitman punt 65
yards to a touchdown.
H.H.S.
Alumni News
Len Gilman stopped in Heppner
on his return from the , Whitman
game.
Kathryn Parker returned from La
Grande to fill the vacancy in the
county clerk's office.
Louise Anderson received an in
jury to her ankle when she fell. She
is attending Oregon State college.
Riley Munkers and Bill McCaleb
are cutting wood in the mountains,
Ernest (Pinky) Clark is working
in Clark's grocery store.
Francis Kugg was visiting in
Heppner last week from Banks
where she is employed-
H.H.S.
HUMOR
Vernon Knowles on a crowded
street car in Portland: "Madam
would you like me to get you
strap?"
"No, thank you, I have one."
"Then would you mind letting go
of my necktie?"
Emery Coxen to grocery clerk
"Give me a dollar's worth of that
blood-shot celery."
Clerk: "Blood-shot celery?"
E. C: "Yes, that over there."
Clerk: "Oh, yes, rhubarb."
Little Audrey was riding in a taxi
along mountain roads. The taxi was
swinging around curves at 60 miles
an hour when suddenly the driver
yelled:
"Look out, Audrey! We're going
over the cliff!"
But Audrey just laughed and
laughed, because she knew the cab
was yellow.
John Crawford: "Women don't in
terest me! I prefer the company of
my fellow men.".
Bill Blake: "I'm broke, too, broth
er." We heard about a certain fresh
man girl the other day who drank
a pint of yeast one night to make her
rise early the next day.
The athletic director halted the
Oysters
and
Shell
Fish
NOW IN
SEASON
Marine delicacies
lend zest to our
menus.
Try our
Fountain Service
o
A Good Meal
Anytime
at the
Elkhorn
Restaurant
ED CHINK, Prop.
student in the gymnasuim and ask-
ed: "Flat feet ever bother you?" And
the youth grinned, "Only once, for
speeding."
The human brain is a wonderful
organ. It starts working the moment
we get up and doesn't stop until we
get to school.
Small Son: "Mother, may I go
swimming?"
Mother: "No, sonny; the water is
too deep."
Son: "But father is "
Mother: "Yes, but father is in
sured."
Bertha Akers: "Did that beauty
operator say good-bye to you?"
Betty Happold: "Well, she gave
me a wave betore 1 left.
Lloyd Burkenbine: "I write a poem
every ten minutes and think noth
ing of it."
Dorothy Howell: "Probably every
one else thinks the same."
Mr. Peavy: "I'm writing a mystery
novel"
Mr. Blankenship: "Who's going to
publish it?"
Mr. Peavy: "That's the mystery."
TRUCKING
ANYWHERE FOR HIRE
Two Tracks in Operation
Insured Carrier
livestock Hauling a Specialty
Arthur E. Ritchie
Phone 212 lone, Ore.
Professional
Directory
A. D. McMurdo, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Trained Burse Assistant
Office in Masonic Building
Heppner, Oregon
Morrow County
Abstract & Title Co.
INC.
ABSTRACTS OF TTTLB
TITia! INSURANCE
Office New Peters Building
A Home for the Aged
Home-like care and surroundings
with graduate nurse in constant
charge. Inquire for rates, includ
ing room and meals.
Morrow General Hospital
Mrs. L. G. Rumble, Mgr.
r
F. W. Turner fir Co.
FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE
INSTTB.ANCE
Old Line Companies. Beal Estate
Heppner, Oregon
Jos. J. Nys
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Peters Ball ding, Willow Street
Heppner, Oregon
Laurence Case
Mortuary
"Just the service wanted
when you want It most"
FOB BEST MABXXT PRICES for
your mw or old wheat, see
CORNETT GREEN
for grain stored In Heppner and
Lexington,
ELMER GRIFFITH
at lone for rest of Branch.
Representing Balfour, Ontario Co.
Phelps Funeral Home
Telephone 1252
I Licensed Funeral Directors
Trained Lady Assistant
Heppner, Oregon
I. O. Turner
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Phone 173
Hotel Heppner Building
HEPPNER, ORE.
Dr. Raymond Rice
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
r
Office
First National Bank Bi aiding
Office Phone 523 House Phone 823
'J
Heppner
Abstract Co.
J. LOGIE RICHARDSON, Mgr.
BATES SEASONABLE
Roberts Building Heppner, Ore.
P. W. Mahoney
ATTORNEY AT LAW
CtENEBAL XNSUBANCS
Heppner Hotel Building
Willow St. Entrance
J. 0. Peterson
Latest Jewelry and Gift Goods
Watches Clocks - Diamonds
t Watch and Jewelry
itepainug
Heppner, Oregon
Vawter Parker
mi
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Phone ITS
Heppner Hotel Building
Dr. Richard C. Lawrence
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 fc Surgeon
FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLDO.
Res. Phone 1162 Office Phoue 492
HEPPNER, OREGON
W. M. EU BANKS
Representing
KERR, GIFFORD & CO., INC.
on Heppner Branch
V. R. Runnion
AUCTIONEER
Farm Sales and Lhrestook a Specialty
406 Jones Street, Heppner, Ore.
Phone 462
MAKE BATES AT MY EXPENSE
Frank C. Alfred
Attorney at Law
Telephone 442
Rooms 3-4
First National Bank Building
HEPPNER, OREGON
Peterson & Peterson
tscnW.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
U. 8. National Bank Building
PENDLETON, OREGON
Practice in State and Federal Courts
Real Estate
General Line of Insurance and
Bends
W. M. EUBANKS
Votary Puhlio
Phone 62
lone, Ore.
W. L. Blakely
Representing
Connectiontt Mutual Life Xnsurenee
Co., Caledonian Fire Xnsuranos Oo.
HIGHEST CASH PRICES FOR
WOOL HIDES FELTS
Phone 782 Heppner, Ore.
J
the "Fatal Quest"
showed up best in the Eastern Ore