PAGE SIX HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1937 THE Hehisch Published by the Journalism Class of Heppner High School Calendar of Events Basketball Nov. 30, lone vs. Heppner. Dec. 10, Adams vs. Heppner. Operetta, December 17. H.H.S. Thanksgiving Many of us get down upon the world sometimes in our lives. We think that everything is wrong and can't see any good in anything. On the whole, it is not all our fault; perhaps something does go wrong, then everything seems that way. Thanksgiving will be here Thurs day; so regardless of our troubles let's forget them and think of every thing we have to be thankful for, Just sit down to that dinner with our thoughts upon the brighter side of life and make an impression upon the dinner. Let's draw all the little glooms out of the week and fill it with hap piness and joys. We hope everyone has a very happy Thanksgiving. H.H.S. Football Banquet Ends Season Taps were blown upon Heppner High's football season at a banquet given last Saturday evening at the Parish house. It was prepared by the Home Economics club, supervised by Miss Nordstrom. Coach Knox, acting as toastmaster, requested each boy to make a speech. Mr. Blankenship congratulated the team and the six football players who are graduating this year, on what they did throughout their football careers. H.H.S. Basketball Season Opens Heppner high school's basketball season will officially open next Tuesday against lone at the local gymnasium. lone is reported to have the strongest team in years, while Heppner's ranks are greatly deplet ed by graduation last year. No starting line-up has been given due to the few practices. Following this game, will be one with Adams, coached by Mr. Tetz, former Hepp ner coach. H.H.S. Here and There Emery Coxen, Wilfred Stone, Mil ton Morgan and Jackson Gilliam were among Heppner visitors in Pendleton Saturday. A group of Heppner young people were seen at the dance at Hardman, Saturday evening. Richard Hayes spent the week end in Corvallis. H.H.S. Pep Club Gives Program An assembly was given last week by the five new members of the Pep club, as part of their initiation. The new members are Scott McMurdo, Bethal Blake, Carolyn Vaughn, Bud dy Blakely and Paul Doolittle. Their program consisted of a debate, Re solved: "That mosquitoes should be given government rights." The negative speakers were Bethal Blake and Buddy Blakely. The affirmative speakers were Scott McMurdo and Carolyn Vaughn. The chairman was Paul Doolittle. The judges, other members of the Pep club, could not reach their decision, so will refer to Congress for their answer. H.H.S. Eighth Grade News Philip Cohn, who has just re turned from a trip East, gave an in teresting report of his travels to the eighth grade class Monday morning. A movie was shown to the grade school Monday morning. It was the story of Boulder Dam from the time it was begun until it was finished. It went into every detail of construc tion and was very interesting. An other short reel called "Heritage" was also shown. H.H.S. Guess Who? He's a two year vet. He takes part in all sports; He wears clothes of all sorts. He goes with a select set. He's a swell fellow, you bet! If you don't know this man, Visit room three, and soon you can. PINTO POINTS Reviving remnants of recent rov ings over gridiron realms . . . The roughest, toughest player with the most envious ability of being able to take it as well as dish it out: Os car, the tackling dummy. The flash iest team, Arlington . . . also to that team goes the honor of possessing the most intricate play seen this sea son ... a triple reverse lateral and forward pass, six men handling the ball before the completion of the play. The school claiming the most uncertain schedule, Heppner. The surprise team of the year, both as to fighting spirit and weight, Fossil . . . boasting an aggregation averaging 137 pounds that held Heppner to a 6 to 6 tie. The most ghastly rumor concerning a member of the Hepp ner football squad . . . that Dean Gilman, frosh bullback, was residing in the local county jail as the result of a Hallowe'en prank. The player whose absence from the Mustang line-up proved to be a bad luck jinx, Jackson Gilliam . . . his attendance was required elsewhere on the dates of two Heppner games, and the re suits of that duo of battles were a defeat and a tie for the local team, Potentially, one of the greatest teams in this section of the country, guess? the most forgetful and over anxious player, a member of the Hermiston contingent . . . after having played football for four years, this football er, on entering the game, failed to report to the proper official . . . this act cost his team a five yard penalty that was most advantageous to the opposing team. The shiekiest appear ing eleven, Fossil . . . with the nu merous razor-thin strips of bristles adorning the upper lips of several members of that outfit. Season's bone-head play, ??? ... guess again Closest punting average between two teams, Heppner-Hermiston . 27 yards, one and one-fifth feet for the Mustangs, and an even 27 yards for the Bulldogs. The team that will probably, within a short time, close ly resemble an eleven man moun taineer unit, Condon . . . the Gilliam county boys started the cultivation of beards several weeks prior to their game with Arlington, and swore never to shave them off until they stepped on Arlington's neck . . . the soon-to-appear hill-billy boys lost that battle, meaning that the two schools will not meet again on the gridiron until next fall. Most tense moment in a game, so far as Hepp ner was concerned . . . the attempt by Heppner to make the conversion after pushing over the tying touch down in the Hermiston contest . . . however, the kick was low and left the score standing at 6 all. The most upright, outstanding object of the year, the lone erect goalpost that still remained in place after part of the Hermiston student body, wishing to save the local athletic managers some unnecessary labor, removed the others from their rather unstable positions in terra firma . . . perhaps this may also be properly termed the biggest pushover of the season. The team most greatly handicapped, Touchet . . . this school sent on its trips, a traveling squad of only 12 players. The deep dark question of the recent Hermiston skirmish . . . what would have been the outcome of that game if, on the try for point, Heppner had attempted an end run instead of kicking for the conver sion, after Van Marter's touchdown tied the score? The man who pro duced the attendance-drawing foot ball team that drew the largest ath letic crowds to the Rodeo grounds in many years, Robert Knox. H.H.S.- HUMOR You Wouldn't Believe It A backwoods mountanieer one day found a mirror which a tourist had lost. "Well, if it ain't my old dad," he said, a she looked in the mirror. "I never knowed he had his pitcher took." He carried the mirror home and, being rather ashamed of his dad's "pitcher," he stole into the attic and hid it. But his actions didn't escape his suspicious wife. That night while he slept, she slipped up to the attic and found the mirror. "Hum-um," she said, looking into it, "so that's the old hag he's been chasin'." It Wasn't There! The absent - minded professor drove up to his garage door, looked inside, and blinked. Then he leaped into his car and drove like fury to the police station. Maybe the nation would feel a bit more optimistic if the girls would get their fingernails out of the red. Hugh Crawford (Tuesday, 8:00 p. m., at band practice) with yawn: "Ho-hum, gosh! I wish this was Sat urday morning and I was in bed." ' Doctor: "Have you got any organic troubles?" Andy Davidson: "I think I have. I can't even carry a tune." Jeanette Blakely (at busy street corner): "I shall certainly cross, of ficer. I've as much right on this street as that truck has." Officer: "Sure you have, lady but leave your name and address be fore you start.' Don Bennett: "How tall is that native hunter?" Norval Osborn: "About six feet two in his stalking feet." Diner: "Do you serve crabs here?" Jack Merrill: "We serve anyone; sit down." Coach: "Suppose it was the fourth down, on their 14-yard line, with the score tied and three minutes to go What would you do?" Harry O'Donnell: "I'd slide down farther on the bench to get a better look at the next play." Friend: "What is your son taking up in college this year?" Dad: "Space! Nothing but space!" Lond-winded lecturer: :"If I have talked too long, it's because I have not my watch with me, and there s no clock in this hall." Voice from audience: "There's a calendar behind you." More advice to the Freshmen wise and otherwise: Never get your English, depend on the teacher for a speech. 1 Skip gym when possible. Don't buy typing paper; borrow it. Don't walk down the steps; it isn't necessary. If you must study, study in Gen eral Science. Don't pay your class tax; it isn't proper. Always be like the sophomores; mind the juniors. The Question Box for the lovelorn, dumb-bells, etc: Dean Sprinkel: "Do small cows give condensed milk?" "No, Dean, condensed milk is made by trying to get a quart of milk in a pint bot tle, a very rare occurrence." Joe Aiken: "I am in love with a very homely girl, but she doesn't seem to care for me, while a pretty girl with a swell car is deeply in love with me. What shall I do?" "Dear Joe, marry the girl you love, and send me the name and address of the other." Bob S.: "After graduation from high school, I plan on buying a small ranch and taking a wife. What would you advise?" "Dear Bob, I would advise you to be careful whose wife you take." Don Bennett: "Help ! ! ! ! I am stranded in the middle of the Pa cific with not a boat in sight. What shall I do?" "Dear Don, our space is up, but don't go away; we'll be back again next week." ... When all my thoughts in vain are thunk, And all my winks in vain are wunk, What saves me from a rocky flunk? My ability to study! (Ruth Green) Did you know that If permitted to do so, Indian ele phants take three baths daily? To start a freight locomotive, it requires a ton of coal to get it at top speed? The oak tree is preyed upon by more than 300 insects? Humming birds cannot use their legs for walking? The Great Wall of China was built in the third century B. C? A load weighing 1,100 times its own weight can be pulled by a flea? China has been conquered six times in her history? Wings or flaps of the sting ray or stingaree are used in New Orleans in preparing a dish called Raie an Eurre Noir? About five quarts of air are con tained by the average man's lung? American boys prefer red as their favorite color? Red rain fell at Lake Garda, Italy? (The phenomenon was caused by dust kicked up by sandstorms on the Sahara desert) H.H.S. Cranium Breaker My father has a son who isn't my brother. Who is he? QUINTS "IDENTICAL" Corvallis Scientists have conclud ed that the Dionne quintuplets are monozygotic, that is, developed from a single egg, and thus correspond to identical twins, reports Mrs. Sara Prentiss, professor of child devel opment at Oregon State college. Mrs. Prentiss, while doing graduate work in the east, was recently invited to attend a special conference of scien tists who visited the quints and heard detailed reports on their prog ress. The percentage of difference among the five famous sisters is no greater than that expected between twins known to be identical, the sci entists reported after many tests and measurements. . Mr. and Mrs. James Burnside were shopping in town Tuesday from the ranch in the Hardman district. TRUCKING ANYWHERE FOR HIRE Two Trucks 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 Norse Assistant Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon Morrow County Abstract & Title Co. INC. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE TITLE 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. 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 "fast tie sezrlce wanted when you want It most" FOR BEST MARXBT PRICES tor your new or old wheat, see CORNETT GREEN for grain stored in Heppner and Lexington, ELMER GRIFFITH at lone for rest of Branch. Representing Balfour, Onthrle A Co. Phelps Funeral Home Telephone 1332 Licensed Funeral Directors Trained Lady Assistant Heppner, Oregon J. O. 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. LOGIB RICHARDSON, Mgr. BATES SEASONABLE Roberts Building Heppner, Ore. P. W. Mahoney ATTORNEY AT LAW GENERAL INSURANCE Heppner Hotel Building Willow St. Entrance J. O. 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 W. M. EU BANKS Representing KERR, GEFFORD & CO., INC. on Heppner Branch 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 8-4 First National Bank Building HEPPNER, OREGON Peterson fir Peterson ATTORNEYS AT LAW U. 8. National Bank Building PENDLETON. OREGON Practice in State and Federal Courts Real Estate General Line of Insurance and Bonds W. M. EUBANKS Notary Pnbllo Phone 62 lone. Ore. W. L. Blakely Representing Conneotlontt Mutual Life Insurance Co., Caledonian Fir Insurance Co. HIGHEST CASH PRICES FOR WOOL HIDES FELTS Phone 782 Heppner, Ore.