- r 1 F T Y ...APICAL " r U ' - - Volume 57, Number 14 Heppner, Oregon, Thursday, June 6, 1940 Subscription $2.00 a Year Trade Day Plan To be Studied by Local Merchants C. of C Proposes to Augment Free Show With Special Sales . Expressions of general satisfaction with the free matinee sponsored by the business houses the first Satur day of each month prompted the Heppner chamber of commerce at the monthly meeting last night to undertake an expansion of the idea by adding a trade day with merch ants offering a limited number of specials. This conclusion was reach ed after discussion of a plan in use elsewhere in the country and thot to be practical here. W. C. Rosewall, chairman of the trade relations committee of the chamber, submitted the plan which calls for organization of the retail merchants for what may be termed "Heppner Trade Days." It is pro posed to work the trade day in con nection with the free matinee to offer people of the county more in ducement to trade at home. The trade relations committee will un dertake the task of organizing the merchants. Quick action is needed if Morrow county is to receive any highway work through the state highway commission this year, said George N. Peck, countv commissioner. He advocated contacting the new com' missioner from eastern Oregon, Her man Oliver, within the next few days, outlining to him this coun ty"s needs. At present the county court has two pieces of road pn jected Tor finishing and the com mission has already given some as surance that at least one will re ceive attention this year. Peck says it is up to Morrow county to get this assistance as the funds are avail able, or can be made so, and unless we press our claim "the commission will place it elsewhere. It has been indicated that a sufficient sum to complete some four miles of second ary surfacing will be available by July 1. A report by the membership com mittee showed the club membership has passed the 60 mark set as a goal two months ago. The commit' tee is not stopping with that figure and will press the campaign to en roll every business house and all citizens interested in the welfare of town and county. A change was made in the sched ule of meetings. Under the original schedule there has been one mem bershio meeting and two board of directors meetings each month. The change calls for two member ship meetings each month with the directors meeting afterwards. The meetings will be held in the eve ning and will be dinner affairs. At suggestion of C. D. Conrad membership board will be placed in a prominent spot on Main street. The present membership will be enrolled on the board and each new member's name will be entered. Conrad and Ray P. Kinne were assigned the task of preparing the board. The next meeting of the chamber of commerce will be held Wednes day, Jnue 19. Mrs. Lutie Dinsmore arrived last week from her home in San Fran cisco to spend a month visiting her relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Sanders of Seattle were week-end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kinne. Mrs. Alma Carlson of Boston, Mas sachusetts is visiting at the home of her son, Walter Carlson. For Sale John Deere mower and 12-foot McCormick rake. Raymond Blahm, Box 151, Heppner. 13-14p. COUNTY STOCK TO COMPETE AT UNION ' Ten Future Farmers Take Calves for Judging at Eastern Oregon Stock Show Morrow county cattle will form part of an exhibit at the Eastern Oregon Livestock show at Union this week end. Ten boys of the local Future Farmers of America left yesterday for Union taking 12 head of calves selected from their projects of the last year for entry in competitive judging. Included in the group are Dean Gilman, Arthur Vance, Pat Healy, Jimmy Johnson, James Moyer, Bruce Lindsay, Bernard, Doherty, Douglas Drake, Claude Drake and Don Fell. They took three dairy type calves and nine fat steers. One of the steers weighs close to 1100 pounds, accord ing to W. S. Bennett, FFA leader and Smith-Hughes instuctor at Heppner high school, and it is ex pected that all the steers will com mand a good price at the auction Summer Session For 4-H Clubbers To Open Monday Morrow County En rollment at State College Reaches 27 A peaceful invasion, although a veritable blitzkrieg of boys and girls, of which Morrow county will be an ally, is impending for the Oregon State college campus as some 2000 members of Oregon's 4-H clubs con verge on the campus for the opening of the twenty-sixth annual 4-H club summer session June 10. The session will continue to Friday, June 21. The "invaders" will reach the cam pus by special trains, busses, and private cars. The largest special will start from La Grande at 7:30 o'clock which is a feature of each closing i Monday morning, and will pick up day at the stock show. The beef animals were developed on a half and half ration of wheat and barley and all the alfalfa hay they could eat. In some instances Bennett says calves have gained nearly two ' and one fourth pounds daily on this ration. Representatives of. the office of the state supervisor of agriculture will be in the county Monday to judge a Future Farmer project Some fifty similar projects will be judged over the state for the pur pose of selecting exhibitors at the state fair. The 20 best projects will go to the fair. Bennett has selected William Padberg's hog and poultry project for consideration in Morrow county. , Band Concert Set 1 For Saturday Night The Heppner school band under the leadership of Harold Buhman will play a concert on Main street Saturday evening of this week. The young musicians have been rehears ing on some new marches since the close of school and will be prepared to give the public some snappy en tertainment for a half hour or so. Program plans also include the awarding of senior pins, a matter that could not be attended to before the close of school. Arrangements have been made for the band to .represent Heppner lodge No. 358, B. P. O. E. at the district convention to be held in Pendleton on June 15. Several lod ges of the district will sponsor the appearance of school bands, includ ing the crack La Grande high school band. Wightman Hears Grant County Case A case bringing numerous attor neys and claimants to town was heard before J. J. Wightman, con ciliation commissioner, Tuesday. It was the second hearing in the bank ruptcy proceedings of Hugh Mc Kenna of Gant county. McKenna was represented by E. B. Moore of Canyon City. C. Kilpatrick of Canyon City represented one of the creditors, B. E. Stewart and the First National Bank of Portland was represented by V. V. Pender grass. Creditors were asking for delay of compromise proceedings until conflicting claims between creditors and debtor now in litigation in the Grant county court have been de tided. delegations along the route as it proceeds west to Portland. There it takes on the Clatsop and Columbia delegations, as well as those from Portland, and growing as it continues up the valley, the special will pull into Corvallis that evening with 1200 to 1300 aboard. A smaller special will come from Klamath and Lake counties, while the boys and girls from southern Oregon points west of the Cascades will reach Corvallis by bus. Last year total attendance to the session reached 1975 and, while the attempt was made this year to have approximately the same number, in dications are that the total may go slightly over 2000, says H. C. Sey mour, state club leader in the O. S. C. extension service. All dormitory facilities on the campus, as well as 30 , fraternity and sorority houses, will be used to provide aocommoda dations for the clubbers Donors of scholarships to Morrow county boys and girls are as follows: Heppner Branch First National Bank of Portland, Gene Majeske; Braden and Bell Tractor Co., Don Campbell; Morrow County Wool Growers Aux iliary, Jack Edmondson; Elks Lodge, Irvin Rauch; Safeway Stores Inc., Frances Skoubo; J. C. Penney Co., Malcolm O'Brien; Lexington Grange, Buddy Peck and Jean Rauch. Rhea Creek Grange, Marjorie Pe terson; Greenfield Grange and Boardman P. T. A., Edwin Ball, Iv era Olson and Hilma Tyler; Hard man 4-H clubs and community, Al ene Inskeep, Vera McDaniel, Jeanne Leathers, and Irl Glary; Lena Grange, Anne McGirl; Alpine 4-H club, Ina Rauch; Morrow county, Mildred Clary, Vern McDaniel, Mar garet Tamblyn, Mary Mclntyre, Neta Bleakman and Rae Cowins; Oregon State Fair, Bruce Lindsay and Tad Miller. Most of these scholarships were given as awards at the county fairs last year. Mrs. Ethel Knighton and Mrs. C. D. Conrad, both local club leaders, will chaperone the Morrow county group to Corvallis. C. D. Conrad, county agent, will attend the last week of the session to assist with the school and make arrangements for the return trip. LOCAL EDUCATOR DINNER SPEAKER Mrs. Lucy Rodgers on Pro gram at Luncheon Honoring New E. O. C. E. President Mrs. Lucy E. Rodgers, Morrow county superintendent of schools, spent Tuesday in La Grande where she attended the luncheon given in honor of Dr. Roben J. Maaske and commencement exercises for the class of 1940 at Eastern Oregon College of Education. The luncheon was held in the ballroom of the Sacajawea inn and marked the in auguration of Dr. Maaske as presi dent of eastern Oregon's institution of higher education. Mac Hoke of Pendleton, member of the state board of higher educa tion, presided. Greetings to the new president were given by Roy L. Skeen, representing the college; Ted Wilson of Boardman, student body president-elect; Mrs. Rodgers, rep resenting the school executives and teachers of eastern Oegon; Fred E. Kiddle, Island City, speaking for La Grande and eastern Oregon; the higher educational institutions in the northwest, by Dr. Robert E. McConnell, president Central Wash ington College of Education, Ellens burg, Wash., and Dr. Frederick M. Hunter, chancellor Oregon state system of higher education. Dr. Maaske was installed as pres ident at the commenoement exer cises held in the college auditorium at 2:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Beatrice Walton Sackett, vice president of the state board of high er education, was the uistalling officer. One Morrow county girl, La Vern Baker of Boardman, was a member of the class of 43 graduates receiv ing certificates for teacher training courses. Junior certmcates were awarded 29 others "who have com pleted junior college work and are eligible to enter the college or urn versity as juniors. Mrs. Rodgers stated she was proud of the manner in which Ted Wilson delivered the greetings of the stu dent body to Dr. Maaske. She feels that Morrow county was quite well represented on this occasion. BUILDING CABINS John Houlton has started erec tion of a six-cabin court on north Chase street on property recently purchased from Mrs. Mahala Minor. Houlton has been working on ranch es in this vicinity for many years, having been in the employ of Ralph I. Thompson until recently. He plans to operate the cabins himself. Petitions Filed for Consolidation Move Two school districts have filed petitions for election under the con solidation law, according to an nouncement of Mrs. Lucy E. Rod gers, county school superintendent. District No. 32, lower Rhea ceek and district No. 35, lone, have asked the consolidation board to set i date for voting on the question. Other districts have shown a ret icence to take action, Mrs. Rodgers says, fearing they might be the only ones to attempt consolidation. Now that districts 32 and 35 have taken the initial step it is believed others will fall in step. Tentative Date Set for 3-C Camp Party June 23 is the date selected by Lieut. Marius P. Hanford, command er of Camp Heppner, for the annual CCC party. This date will hold Hanford says, unless something un- forseen arises to change it or possi bly cancel the party. This informa tion was given to the Lions club Monday. With the war situation what it is and the status of the local camp what it has been for several months. nothing is certain, Hanford explained, The camp is going ahead with plans and with the date definitely settled will be prepared to receive guests on that date, be they 150 or 1500. Nomination of officers was the principal business claiming the at tention of the Lions Monday. The nominating committee submitted list including W. C. Rosewall for president; Tom Wells and Frank C Alfred, first vice president; Dr. D. McMurdo and C. D. Conrad, sec ond vice president; J. O. Turner, secretary-treasurer; C. J. D. Bau man, tail twister and D. M. Ward lion tamer. Population Here Shows Small Loss Since 1930 Count Preliminary Figures Give Town 1 ,138 in Census of 1940 Preliminary figures submitted by W. W. Sirrine, district supervisor, show that Heppner has experienced a small decline in population, in the ten-year period, 1930-1940. The first returns of the sixteenth census, tak en as of April 1, 1940, give the town's population as 1,138 as against 1,190 in 1930. The 1940 figures are preliminary and subject to correc tion, Sirrine states. Under the agricultural census, as shown by a preliminary count of the returns of the supervisor of the 1940 census of agriculture, inventory as of April 1, 1940, the number of farms in Morrow county is 539, as compared with 632 on January 1, 1935, and 628 on April 1, 1930. Thia figure is also preliminary and sub ject to correction. In making this report the super visor states that "while these fig ures are preliminary and subject to correction, they are believed to be substantially correct. Please exam ine them carefully and if you think any residents have been omitted from the enumeration or if you have any other criticisms to offer, please advise me at once so that the matter may receive prompt attention." A few weeks ago it became ap parent that numerous citizens of Heppner had been overlooked in the enumeration. The matter was taken up with the supervisor and addition al blanks were forwarded to teh chamber of commerce. Several per sons called for and filled out blanks and doubtless there are others here who have not been counted. The chamber of commerce made no or ganized drive to uncover those miss ed in the count and is not so disr posed to do so now, although it will assist wherever possible in adding names to the census. VISITORS ENJOY STOCK Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Nelson Portland were guests the last wee! end at the home of Mrs. Nelson' father, W. H. French, at the Blue Mountain ranch. They were accom panied by Dr. Ben Wade, veteran Portland physician. The visitors en joyed the stock, especially the more than a hundred little pigs, the young calves and seven mule colts that comprise some of the increase on the ranch this spring. Mr. French had to leave Friday with a shipment of cattle for the Portland market, and the guests remained until Sun day. Range Contest Winners Announced Winners in the preliminary dis trict judging of the electric range essay contest sponsored by electric range dealers and Pacilic Power & Light company are as iololws: El ectric roaster, Mrs. Edna V. Wood worth, 504 N. W. 8th St., Pendleton, Oregon; $10 merchandise award, Mrs. Cliff Dayhuff, 217 S. W. 3rd St., Pendleton; and $5 merchandise awards, Miss Katie Minert, No. 6 Chase St., Heppner; Mrs. Cliff Day huff, 217 S. W. 3rd St., Pendleton, and Rose Leibbrand, Heppner, The entries of all these winners will now compete with the winning entries from the other districts serv ed by Pacific Power & Light com pany for the five electric ranges to be given as grand prizes in this contest. Judges of the final contest are Mrs. C. W. Wall, president of the Oregon Parent Teachers asso ciation; Miss Elizabeth Prior, prin cipal, Yakima Valley Junior col lege; and a member of the staff of Whitman college. The five grand prize winners will be announced as soon as possible. The judges of the electric range contest in this district were Mrs. Aileen Moreland, county health nurse; Mrs. Dorothy Bishop, home demonsltration afljant of Umatilla county; Miss Margaret Struthers, case worker of welfare commission of Umatilla county. A group of Heppner men went to Pendleton Tuesday evening to at tend an Odd Fellows meeting. They included C. A. Howard, C. W. Bar low, Cornett Green, Ralph Beamer, Harold Hill, Browning, Lee Howell.