Page Two LEXINGTON NEWS Study Club Elects Officers for Year By MARGARET SCOTT ' Walter Gerard, small son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Gerard, is ill at his home with flu. Mrs. Foos arrived Saturday to make her home here during the school year. Juanita Padberg received a cut on the head when she fell from the back porch steps at her home Mon day. She was taken to a Heppner physician who dressed the wound. Kenneth Jackson spent the week end at home from his studies in Portland. Forest Miller was a guest at the A. M. Edwards home Sunday. Local hunters who have bagged a deer are Albert Edwards, Eldon Padberg and Duane Johnson. Claud Hill of Redmond joined his family here this week to visit friends and relatives. The family returned home Saturday. The Three Link club held a meet ing Tuesday evening to discuss plans for the Pioneers' Reunion, A large crowd attended the P. T. A. meeting Wednesday evening. Mrs. Lilian Turner told of her visit in Alaska and community singing was enjoyed. Refreshments of cookies, punch and coffee were served. The local Rebekah lodge enter tained the Rebekah convention Sat urday. There will be a social meeting for the community at the grange hall in the evening of Saturday, Sept. 28. The study club met Monday eve' ning to elect officers and outline their program for the coming year. Officers elected were president, Mrs. Foos; vice-president, Helen Bresh ears; secretary-treasurer, Mary Ed wards. The club will study current events until after election, then will study conditions in the various for eign countries. The next meeting will be October 8 at the Gleason home. Art Hunt was ill at his home this week. Lola Padberg spent Thursday at the Harvey Bauman home. Estelle Ledbetter was a guest of Eileen Scott Wednesday night. Deanna Steagall, small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Steagall, who was severly injured when she fell from the back seat of the car while coming from Heppner the first of the week, is improving and able to be up and around. Maxine Gray spent Tuesday at the William Van Winkle home. Gene Gray of Stanfield was a business visitor here last Wednes day evening. Dinner guests at the Tempa John son home last Thursday were Sarah "Thornburg, Melissa Stonebraker and Xaura Scott. . Mr, and Mrs. Eldee Vinson and Mary Alice spent Sunday with rel ati.es on Butter creek. Mrs. Knighten and daughter have moved from the Ralph Scott house to the Alec Hunt house. Crippled Children Clinic Scheduled A clinic for the crippled children of Umatilla and Morrow counties will be held in Pendleton on October 17, 1940, at the Vert Memorial build ing. This clinic is part of the crippled children's program of the state pub lic welfare commission. Arrange ments have been made for the clinic by the Crippled Children's service of the Oregon State Public Welfare commission, the Umatilla County Public Welfare comission and the Umatilla Couaty Health unit, the Morrow County Public Welfare com mission and the Morrow County Public Health nurse. Admittance to the clinic is by ap plication to the Umatilla County Public Welfare commission, and the Morrow County Public Welfare commission. Dr. C. Elmer Carlson will be the examining orthopedic surgeon. Heppner Blacksmith & Machinery Co. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT D. H. JONES, Mgr. Expert Acetylene and Electric Heppner ONE NEWS lone College Students Leave for Schools By MRS. ELMER GRIFFITH Rev. C. F. Swander, state secre tary of the Christian churches, will hold services at the Christian church in lone next Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Officers elected by the girls league of the high school are Charlotte Cannon, president; Eileen Sperry, vice-president; Betty Lou Lindsay, secretary; Barbara Ledbetter, trea surer; Doris Palmateer, sergeant-at-arms. The first home game of football will be played with Umatilla Thurs day. Freshman initiation was held Fri day evening. The Rebekah lodge will entertain the assembly president, Vernisha Newby of Salem, and Bertha McCol lom, assembly warden, of Portland, at their hall Thursday evening. The social meeting of the Womens Topic club will be held at the home of Mrs. C. W. Swan son next Sat urday, Sept. 28. Students of state colleges are leav ing this week to resume their stud ies. Among those going are Thelma Nelson, Clifford Carlson, Jane Hus ton, and Paul Smouse to the univer sity, Ted Palmateer and Marion and Mancel Krebs to Oregon State, Ka- therine Griffith to Monmouth, Helen Lindsay to La Grande, Norman Bergstrom to Pacific, and Arthur Bergstrom to Reed. Robert Smith and members of the family went to Yakima Saturday to attend the funeral of his brother, Tom Smith. Mr. Smith was well known here where he had visited many times. C. A. Franklin and son Rupert of Camas, Wash., were Sunday guests at the Laxton McMurray home. Mr. Franklin and Mr. McMurray sol diered together in Cuba during the Spanish-American war. Martin Nickleson of The Dalles is relief station agent here while Frank Ross is- enjoying a hunting trip. Mr. Ross has bid in a position at Keith. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Yarnell went to the mountains Monday for a hunt. Among the successful deer hunt ers returning are Bert Mason, Carl Allyn, and H. V. and Paul Smouse. Mrs. W. T. Sanderson (Lilly Al inger) of Milwaukee was here last week, looking after property inter ests, t Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dobyns and Mr. and Mrs. Noel Dobyns returned Monday evening from a trip to San Francisco and the fair. During their absence, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Olden of Gresham stayed on the ranch and kept the home fires burning. The Oldens returned home Tuesday. Mrs. Leslie Roundy of Condon is visiting her father, Louis Pad berg, while Mr. Roundy is on a hunting trip. Charles Hudson of Pendleton spent Thursday here, looking after farm property. Mrs. Henry Clark and little grand daughter returned Sunday from Portland. A surprise birthday party was held at the Park hotel Wednesday evening, honoring Robert GrabiL Mrs. Arthur Ritchie, A. E. Stefani, and George Snider. Mrs. Stefani and Mrs. Grabil were hostesses. Others present were Mr. Ritchie, Mrs. Sni der, Mr. and Mrs. Garland Swan son, V. R. Runnion, Louis Halvor sen, Clifford McCabe, John Eu banks, Ed Acton and Howard Eu bank s. Miss Ruth Johnson was a Sunday guest at the Franklin Ely home at Morgan. Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Feldman re turned Thursday after spending sev- Stock Ranches Wheat Ranches Creek Ranches FOR SALE See My Listings V. R. Runnion Heppner, Ore. Gazette Times, Heppner, eral weeks at Sunnyvale, Cal. Mrs. Feldman's mother, whom they were visiting, passed away shortly after their arrival. On their return trip, Mr. and Mrs. Feldman visited at Lake Tahoe and returned by way of Burns, where they encountered heavy rain. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Palmateer went to Portland and Estacada Fri day on their way to Corvallis to take their son Ted, who enrolled at the college there. The Morgan school board has WE WELCOME Your Food Stamps The aim of the FOOD STAMP PLAN, effective on next Tuesday, is to assist the distribution of foods of which there are surpluses among the people who need them. You will find many items on the current surplus list rea sonably priced at our store, and the stamps will be readily received here. M. D. CLARK order irstf i. 111 m .v$ tmvt rain mm Tomato Tip Blight and Dahlias Related The close connection between tip blight of tomatoes and proximity of dahlias has been observed this year in various sections of Oregon by F. P. McWhorter, plant pathologist at Oregon State college. A field survey of locations where the disease has. again advertised for bids on a school bus, as they were unable to decide on the last ones. t avp signing the e 011! voUR CAR Low Cost Financing Builds Bank P.rprlit for your other needs in 41 statewide branches B. C. PINCKNEY, Manager OF PORTLAND Thursday, September 26, 1940 been present shows that dahlias had grown or were being grown near the centers of heavy infection. In some cases dahlias showed typical symptoms themselves. While no conclusions are being drawn as yet, Dr. McWhorter is studying the situation and would be glad to hear of any other observa tions that would tend to either support or disprove this theory. To buy, sell or trade, use the G-T Want Ads and get best results. Welding, Blacksmithing J