Thursday, June 5, 1941 Mrs. Lucille McAtee and sor, Arthur and Austin arrived the end of the week for a several-days' vis it with friends and relatives, driv ing from Grand Ridge, 111., where they have made their home since leaving here two years ago. Mrs. McAtee teaches at Grand Ridge, while the boys work in Ottawa, a short distance from their home. Ar thur is employed in a garage and Austin in a tire plant, while both play in an orchestra. To keep their hand in they joined the orchestra at at the dance at Lexington grangs hall Saturday evening, Arthur on the trumpet and Austin on the drums. Among Memorial day visitors in Heppner were Mrs. Julia Clark of Red Bluff, Cal.; Mr. and Mrs. Her man Eberhard of Portland, Mrs. Eb erhard formerly being Miss Stella Penland; Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bar tholomew of Pine City and Fred Bartholomejv of Estacada; Mrs. Ma bel (Ingalls) Brumbaugh of The Dalles; C. A. Minor and grand daughter, Kathryn Brady of Mt. Vernon; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Boyer of John Day. The Duran relatives had a family gathering Sunday, June 1, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Long. Attending from Heppner were Mrs. Adella Duran, Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Duran, Shelly Baldwin, Mr. and Mrs. R, G. McMurtry and son and their guest, Mrs. Olive Ross of Pitts field, HI. Others present were Mrs. Ruth Dudley and three daughters wf Walla Walla, and Mrs. Reaso., Duran and son and daughter from. Spokane. Lt. Chester Christenson of the U. S. marines, made a short call Sun day on his mother, Mrs. Chester Brown of Monument and uncles, C. J, D. and Harvey Bauman here. He accompanied a friend by car as far as Kansas City and flew by plane from there to Pendleton on a two weeks' furlough from his station at Quantico, Va. He recently complet ed work to qualify him for the sec ond lieutenancy he now holds. Miss Irene Beamer has arrived at the home of her mother, Mrs. George Gertson, to spend part of the sum mer vacation from her teaching po sition in the Central Point high school. Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Leach of Pen dleton, accompanied by their daugh ter, Mrs. Richard Stockman of San Diego, Cal., were Memorial day vis itors at the home of Dr. A. D. Mc Murdo. Mrs. John Barrie and daughter, Mary Ann, of Spokane, and Miss Mary Monahan of Seattle are visiting at the home of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Monahan. Mrs. Hanson Hughes left today for Albany, Centralia, Wash., and Portland for a visit with relatives and friends. Mrs. Neal Knighten of Hardman is making good recovery at the Prairie City hospital from a recent operation, friends report. Arthur Parker of Gold Hill de parted yesterday ior his ho;,.e after a visit with friends and relatives for several days. Clarke Davis of John Day, who lived at Lexington for many years, was calling on old-time Heppner friends Saturday. Dr. J. P. Stewart, Eye-Sight Spe cialist of Pendleton, will be at the HEPPNER HOTEL on WEDNES DAY, June 11th. Miss Margaret Doolittle who is attending school in Portland, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Doolittle. i Ad Moore returned home Tuesday from Dayton, Wash., where he at tended the races. MISSIONARY SOCIETY TO MEET The Valby Woman's Missionary society of Gooseberry will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peterson on next Sunday, June 8, at 7:30 p. m. for a strawberry fes tival. Friends and neighbors are cor dially invited. Heppner Mr. and Mrs. Austin Smith and daughter Dorothy of Portland and Mrs. Margaret Leach of Corvallis arrived on Decoration day for a vis it at the home of Mr. Smith's and Mrs. Leach's mother, Mrs. Hanv Archer, departing for home on Mon day. Chester Saling, who was in the city the first of the week for burial services of his late wife, announced that he had accepted the position of steward in the new Elks club at John Day and will move his home from Prairie City to that place in the near future. Mr. and Mrs Bruce Gibbs and children arrived the end of the week from Kep Port,- Wash., and are vis iting relatives and friends this week. Bruce has a job as machinist in a defense industry plant in the Wash ington city. Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Forsythe of Ashland, and Mrs. Forsythe's mo ther, Mrs. Church of Wyoming, vis ited last week end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Forsythe's daughter, Mrs. Ed Dick, Jr., being on their way to Mrs. Church's home. Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Crawford of Ashland were week end visitors in Heppner, enjoying a visit with rela tives and friends. Mr. Crawford as sists in publishing the Southern Or egon Miner, a weekly newspaper at Ashland. Carl Thorpe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Thorpe will undergo an op eration for an affliction of his leg in a Portland hospital next Tues day, it was announced following his return with his mother last week end after undergoing examination. Dr. L. D. Tibbies returned home yesterday from Tacoma where he attended the northwest convention of osteopaths. Mrs. Sam Turner and two children accompanied him and visited relatives in Tacoma. Virgil Esteb and sister, Hazel Hol boke of Salem were visiting with relatives and friends in the Goose berry section over the week end, also with their father, Samuel Esteb at Heppner. Miss Neva Neill, first grade tea cher in the local schools for the last two years, will teach at Ontario next year, according to announcement of friends. J. O. Turner was in Corvallis last week end to attend a reunion of his college class and taking in other ev ents connected with graduation at Oregon State college. Mrs. Olive Rose from Pittsfield, i HI., arrived in Heppner May 29 for Decoration day and is visiting rela tives here. Mrs. Rose is a sister of the late E. S. Duran. Mr and Mrs. Pruitt Cox and daughter Genevieve of Oregon City were here Memorial day, being guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. Y. Ball. GALLAGHER-WILSON Coming as a surprise to their many friends was the marriage on Monday, May 26, of Mrs. Gallagher to Alex Wilson at Lewiston, Idaho. The ceremony was performed by the Episcopal minister. Rev. Mr. Parks. After two days at Lewiston the newlyweds went to Yakima for a visit with Mrs. Wilson's daughter, Mrs. Lee, then to near Vancouver, Wash., visiting two of her sisters, and return by Hood River to visit rela tive and friends. They are now at home to their many Morrow county friends. MRS. LEEZER PASSES Mrs. Lauretta A. Leezer, who re sided in Heppner a good many years ago when her husband was in the hardware business here, died at her home in Portland Tuesday. Funeral rites are being held in the city this afternoon frpm Holman & Lutz chapel. Mrs. Leezer is the mother of Mrs. Earl H. Conser of Portland, Mrs. A. W. Bascom of Los Angeles, and sister of Mrs. W, R. Albee of Los Angeles; also a granddaughter, Mrs. A. Rector of Montreal, Cal., and two great-grandchildren survive. Gazette Times, Heppner, 'Cy' Aiken Sees Lively Business in Prospect That the United States is a -booming from defense activity is the as sertion of Cyrus W. Aiken, eldest son of Mrs. Lillie Aiken, on a visit here Saturday after a recent tour of the east. "Cy," as' his old-time Heppner friends know him, is now of Portland and Boise, Idaho, and represents the Blitz-Weinhard com pany. Cy went to Detroit to get a new car, took in the inauguration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and saw many of the leading indus trial cities on the route home. Signs of- activity noted include two big new General Motors buildings at Flint, construction of another big G. M. plant in Chicago, building of a munitions plant at Kansas City which will employ 25,000 men, new air base at Fort Riley, Kan., besides the munitions depot and air bases in our own vicinity. All the big cities, and smaller ones too, were humming, Cy said. At Fort Riley he protested army buying of Argentina beef to a major, and was told, "You darned fool, you wouldn't get coffee to drink today if we didn't buy some beef down there," which gave him a new slant on the beef question. After describing the many signs of activity, Cy asserted: "Fra telling you this country is going places. And after the war is over this na tion is going to send men to all the countries of the world to stamp out fifth columnists, Fascism, Naziism and the rest of those isms and estab lish a standard of democracy thru out the world that will stand. I'm more American than I've ever been, and I've always been a patriotic American." MISSION SOCIETY MEETS The Woman's Missionary society of the Christian . church met with Mrs. E. R. Huston on Tuesday af ternoon. They had as their guests Dr. Menzees recently returned from India where he had been a mis sionary for 40 years, and is now retired from work, but he and Mrs. Menzees expect to return to India next year to fnish their lives in the work that is so dear to them. STAR Reporter FRIDAY- SATURDAY IN OLD COLORADO William Boyd, Russell Haydcn, Andy Clyde Hopalong Cassidy western with comedy. Plus VICTORY Frederich March, Betty Field Based on Joseph Conrad's novel of adventure in the Dutch East Indies. SUNDAY-MONDAY THAT NIGHT IN RIO (Filmed in Technicolor) Alice Eaye, Don Ameche, Carmen Miranda Eye-filling and ear -filling musical comedy topnotch entertainment. TUESDAY Bargain Night Adults 20c; 2 Children 10c, MR. DYNAMITE Lloyd Nolan, Irene Hervey, J Carrol Naish, Robert Armstrong, Shemp Howard, Cliff (Double Talk) Nazarro WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY NICE GIRL? Dcanna Durbin, Franchot Tone, Walter Brennan, Robert Stack, Robert Bcnchley plus MURDER AMONG FRIENDS Marjorie Weaver, John Hubberd, Cobina Wright, Jr., Mona Barrie" Oregon BOA RDM AN NEWS Boardman Entertains Decoration Guests By MRS. CLAUD COATS Mrs. Crystal Barlow and daugh ter Chloe were visiting in the coun ty seat Wednesday and Thursday of last week. Mrs. Glen Hadley and son Stan ton left for Montana last week to be with Mr. Hadley the remainder of the shearing season. Mrs. W. A. Baker is still in Port land with Mr. Baker's mother who is quite ill. Essie and Esther Jones were vis iting their mother, Mrs. Blanche I Jones, also calling on mends, over the week end. Essie was here also for Decoration day. Other visitors for Decoration day were Mr. and Mrs. Noel Klitz and son at the home of Mrs. M. Klitz, going on to lone for the day. Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Messenger and fam ily of Meacham were at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Barlow and E. . T. Messenger respectively. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Dean and fam ily, Mrs. Elva Dye and two children of Seattle were week-end callers at the John Jenkins and Robert Har wood homes. Mrs. Dean is a sister of Mrs. Jenkins. Mr. and Mrs. Low ell Spagle and family of Silkum were visitors at Mrs. Spaele's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. Packard. Nate and Grace Macomber spent Decoration day at Pilot Rock visit ing relatives. Joe Louis-Buddy Baer Fight Pictures! The clarity of the photography and the preciseness of ex pression on the in-fighting has been equalled only in simulated films of this kind. This picture's a natural piece of entertainment. Some may be attracted to the picture by the newspaper con troversy over whether Joe Louis, the champion, delivered an after-the-bell blow in the final round of the bout, but it will take the sharpest of ears to catch the clang of the timekeeper's clarion. Junior Baer, brother of Max, gives a whirlwind account of himself, demonstrating what sports writers call a "heart" but which the more precise gentry define as courage par excellence. STAR THEATER, Sun.-Mon., June 8-9 sn a c&& fit. A young telephone customer wanted to reach her mother, who was a nurse in a hospital. The telephone operator by dint of special effort located the mother, brought her to the telephone. . . . Later the young customer's signal light again appeared on the switchboard. The oper ator answered and a happy little voice explained,"! 'm hugging the telephone ! " ?yftft&ag fku Bringing folks together Though an average of more than 79 million telephone conver sations per day are handled by the Bell System, each one is an in dividual transaction. And telephone people try to treat it as such. The service seeks to be friendly and helpful as well as technically efficient. THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY Business Office: 4 W. Willow Street, Heppner Phone 5 Page Five Mr. E. Lierman and the FFA boys left Saturday for a week's fishing trip in the Bend country. They were transported in the school bus driven by Lelon McLouth. Mrs. Bob Hilder (nee Edith Nick erson) arrived Friday from Seattle to spend a week with parents and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Barlow of Heppner spent Sunday afternoon on the project, calling on Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Barlow and family. Mardell Gorham is spending this week vacationing with her sister, Mrs. George McNab in Umatillt Clara Mae Dillon has taken a job at the Rqseland service station for the 'summer. Mrs. Alin Deulan, Emma June and Ida Mae Deulan motored to The Dalles Friday to see their father who is quite ill in The Dalles hos pital, and is not showing improve ment at this time. LAWNMOWER SHARPENING Will be prepared to sharpen lawnmowers by factory meth od in short time. N. D. BAILEY mm w aw jtt&dttfa.