Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, March 06, 1941, Page Page Three, Image 3

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    Heppner Gazette Times. Heonner. Opo T) Tl
1 1 f" f aye i nrtje
Thursday, March 6, 1941
IRRIGON NEWS
Rukers of Wallowa
Rent Irrigon Farm
By MRS. W. C. I50M
The Irrigon high school is giving
a dance in the auditorium March 22.
Music will be furnished by the Trou
badors from Echo.
Lee Grabeil from Imbler held ser
vices at the Presbyterian church
Sunday evening.
Mrs. Carl Alquist left for home at
Vale Friday.
Mr. and Mrs, Earl Leach were
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Isom Sunday.
Carl Haddox purchased a new
tractor recently.
Jean Stephens left for Messner
last week, where she has employ
ment. Robert Brace visited his parents
over the week end.
Ollie Coryell visited at the Brace
home Sunday. He was driving a
new automobile.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Melton have
rented the Carl Knighten place for
this season.
Mrs. Carl Haddox entertained a
number of friends at a party Satur
day night, honoring her husband's
birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Isom visited
Mr. and Mrs. Elroy Lamoreaux Sun
day. Mrs. Fred Doll left for her home
at Renton, Wash., Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis from Prineville
and Mr. and Mrs. Bessler from Port
land visited relatives here over the
week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ruker from
Wallowa rented the old Eggleston
place and moved in this week.
Mrs. Marion Pierce and children
from Wallowa are visiting her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. T. Slaughter.
Mr. andxMrs. L. L. Seits have
returned from California and are
staying with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Aldrich, at present. They ex
pect to build on their place north
west of town in the near future. ,
Mr. and Mrs. George Kendler and
daughter Mary were Sunday eve
ning visitors at the W. C. Isom
home. "
BOARDMAN NEWS ,
By MRS. CLAUD COATS'
Mrs. Oliver Forbes and Mrs. James
Howell spent Wednesday in Pen
dleton shopping.
Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Lundell were
attending to business on the project
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Wicklander
of Heppner were here Thursday ad
vertising the bargain store which
Mr. Wicklander recently opened
there.
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Barlow left
Wednesday for their home in Eu
gene after a week's visit here with
friends and relatives. They stopped
overnight in Wasco to visit Mrs.
Barlow's relatives there.
Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Ransier and
son Daniel, Mrs. Frank Marlow and
sons, motored to The Dalles Sunday
to visit Mrs. F. Marlow who is in
the hospital there.
The Misses Essie and Esther Jones
of Pendleton and Hermiston respec
tively, spent the week end here with
their mother, Mrs. 'Blanche Jones.
The girls returned to their work
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Z. J. Gillesp'ie and
sons, and Mr. and Mrs. Claud Coats
and Echo spent Sunday visiting rel
atives in Hardman and Spray. Mr.
and Mrs. Coats visited the former's
mother, Mrs. M. E. Coats and family
in Hardman, and the Gillespies vis
ited friends in Spray.
Mrs. Art Allen was shopping in
Pendleton Monday afternoon.
Word was received Monday of the
birth of an 8V2 pound baby boy to
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Anderson, the
former Helen Russell of Boardman.
The baby was born in the Pendleton
hospital.
Elmer Lierman, Joe Enzler, Miss
Denise Peyralans, and Miss Echo
Coats left Friday to visit in Port
land and other Valley points.
G-T want ads get results.
V. R. RUNNION
AUCTIONEER and
REAL ESTATE
Phone 452 Heppner, Oregon
f
WATCH T HIS IMCfflME WOBB,
KflK. 1EEEEJSE WXPfliElS!
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:-:x-X"X::?v.:.:-:w
Busy little electric cutters like this are hum
ming at top speed in thousands of factories,
slicing out uniforms -tents tarpaulins all
kinds of cloth goods for the army and navy and
the people who do the everyday work at home.
The electricity they use isn't a drop in the
bucket. It costs practically nothing a day.
But let that electricity fail in ANY defense
, ELECTRICITY ANYWHERE... anytime
. . . any amount of it I
America has 4y2 times as much electricity as it had in the
World War. Three times as much as the Axis nations combined.
But what was needed to make the nation's supply of power
completely available, completely efficient, was interconnection.
It took brilliant engineering and billions of dollars to trans
form the skeleton power map of 1918 to the full-grown inter
connected power systems you see on the map of 1940.
Now these transmission lines completely serve every major
industrial area of America with a supply of power from many
sources, safe from interruption. They increased efficiency, made
it possible to utilize a bigger percentage of each plant's output,
and reduced costs and rates.
That is AMERICAN ENTERPRISE at work!
What we want you to know, Mr. Taxpayer, is that this nation
wide American system of power plants, power lines and power
SERVICE is fulfilling and can fulfill every demand that can
be laid on it by the needs of national defense and do it better
than any other system in the world.
And YOU don't have to dig down in your pocketbook for
a single extra tax dollar, or a million or a hundred million
extra tax dollars, to pay out for something you already have !
plant, big or little and all work stops. Let the
service grow inefficient, and defense production
slows up, costs more.
Listen, Mr. Taxpayer YOU pay the national
defense bills. You want to keep the best electric
service in the world at the lowest cost in the
world the service that private enterprise in
vented, created and perfected for Americans!
S 00.000 Toln ind orr.
J 60,000 toIu and ores'. VJ
Note the tremendoui increase In high-voltage trans.
mission lines since the last war. Power plant capacity
on these interconnected systems has increased 4',
times. Today there is plenty of power everywhere!
Pacific Power & Light Company
30 Years of Public Service