Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1938)
Thursday, January 6, 1938 Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon Page Three LEXINGTON NEWS Jack Van Winkle Breaks Arm in Fall By Bertha Hunt Jack Vin Winkle suffered a brok en arm when he was thrown from a horse at his home last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Oris Padberg and family spent Christmas at the home of Mrs. Padberg's mother, Mrs. Frid ley, at Walla Walla. Doris and Eldon Padberg enter tained twenty-three of their friends at a New Year's eve party at their home. The evening was spent play ing cards. Delicious refreshments were served. Lexington P. T. A. will meet next Wednesday evening at the school. A program is geing arranged. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Scott and son Jerry returned home Wednes day evening from Pine Grove after spending several days visiting at the Ed Warner home. , Lyle Allyn spent the week end with relatives in Arlington. Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Ryan and two children spent the week end visiting with relatives in the Willamette val ley. Lawrence Slocum took J. F. Mc Millan to Arlington Tuesday where he took the train for Portland. Mrs. McMillan who has recovered from a recent operation expects to ac company Mr. McMillan home Fri day. Mrs. George Allyn and her grand daughter, Rae Cowins, returned home Sunday from Gaston after visiting for several days at the Lew is Allyn home. PINE CITY NEWS Hardman Man to Pine City School By BBRNICE WATTENBURGER The school board met Tuesday and hired Mr. Clark of Hardman to finish out the term at Pine City. Mrs. Eldon Kinton spent Satur day and Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neill. . A. V. Strain of Weiser, Idaho, spent the holidays with his daughter, Mrs. E. W. Wattenburger. His son, Alvin, of Pilot Rock also spent a few days visiting at the Wattenburger home. August and Lilly Rauch visited at the Healy home Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bull and daugh ter of Pendleton spent Saturday at the H. E. Young home. Guy Moore spent the week with his mother, Mrs. Roy Neill. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wattenburger of Pasco spent the week end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wat tenburger. Mrs. Ollie Neill and daughters, Neva and Lenna, of Heppner were callers at the Jim Daly, E. B. Wat tenburger and Lon Wattenburger homes Saturday. Miss Dora E. Moore returned Sun day from Rainier where she spent her vacation. She says there was very high water around the Rainier vicinity. Faye Finch has been ill the past week. There is to be a quilting at the C. H. Bartholomew home Thursday. Everyone is welcome. Jasper Myers had the misfortune of meeting a team and wagon on the grade near Pine City school. He did n't have room to pass and the truck which he was driving went off the bank into an irrigation ditch. It took the assistance of a caterpillar to get the truck out of the ditch. Jasper was not injured. Miss Charlotte Helms is spending two weeks at her home. She has been taking a business course in Spokane and will return January 10. Mrs. Ritchie and daughter Hazel are spending a few days at the Clay ton Ayers home visiting her daugh ter. Mrs. Avers. James O'Brien, who is attending school in Salem, is home for the hnlidavs. Mrs .Tovce Smith who spent her vacation at Irrigon returned to Pine City Monday. Mrs. John Harrison's brother, Lon ny Knotts of Montana, spent a few days with his sister and took his father, Lonny Knotts' Sr., on to Cal ifornia and Mexico on a visit. Cecelia and Jack Healy were in Heppner Friday and Saturday. August Rauch returned to Cor vallis Saturday evening. Xk'& ' 'v X. This Year Every Year MORROW COUNTY'S NEWSPAPER BRINGS THE STORY- A new baby arrives . . . joys, hopes, ambitions are stirred within the human breast. What will his future be? The Heppner Gazette Times and its newspaper predeces sors have revealed to their readers 54 years of happen ings vital to Morrow county. ... It looks forward to the New Year with hopes of following the stripling baby through a life of pleasurable relations. It solicits the cooperation of its readers in making this story as complete and interesting as possible. ... It offers its columns to local advertisers as the most effective means of telling their story to the greatest number of home folks at the lowest cost. . . . And it bids one and all A HAPPY, PROSPEROUS 1938