Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, November 20, 1941, Page Page Three, Image 3

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    Thursday, November 20, 1941
LEXINGTON NEWS
Many Lex People
See Munitions Depot
By MARGARET SCOTT
Among local people visiting the
ammunition depot at Hermiston
Sunday were Cecil and Carol Jack
son, Mary and Clair Hunt, Cora
Warner, Laura Scott, Melissa Stone
braker, Merritt and Maxine Grey,
Faye Ruhl, Cleo and Bill Van Win
kle, Vernon and Faye Munkers,
George and Emma Peck, Roy and
Mae Campbell, Orville and Gladys
Cutsforth, Bill and Thelma Smeth
urst, Art and Bertha Hunt and chil
dren, George and Sherman Tucker,
and Roberta and Jack Miller.
The annual football banquet mark
ing the close of each football sea
son was held Friday evening in the
local schoolhouse. At this banquet
the mothers entertained the squad
and their fathers, the coach and su
perintendent. Elroy Martin was
toastmaster and speeches were made
by each member of the squad and
his dad. Coach MacDonald made
the athletic awards. The room and
table were decorated in the school
colors of black and orange. Decora
tions were flowers, autumn leaves,
school initials, football, helmet and
streamers.
The football banquet was follow
ed Friday evening by the freshman
return party in the gymnasium with
student body and faculty present.
Games and dancing were enjoyed
with refreshments of cookies, cake
and punch.
Many local citizens are wondering
how it happened that Mr. and Mrs.
George Peck were charivaried Sun
day night horse fiddle and all the
trimmings. How about it, commis
sioner? Mary Hunt was honored with a
surprise birthday party at her home
Saturday evening. The evening was
spent playing "500" after which re
freshments of birthday cake and cof
fee were served. Those present be
sides, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hunt were
Mr. and Mrs. Callie Duncan, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Jackson, Mr. and
.Mrs. Harry Duvall, Mr. and Mrs.
John Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Whitmere
MacDonald, Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Bur
ton, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Munkers,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrer.ce Palmer, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Warner, Helen Niger,
Louire Hunt and Merle Carmichael.
George Peck spent several days
last week in Portland attending a
commissioners' convention. He was
accompanied home Sunday by Mrs.
Peck who has spent the last several
weeks visiting her sister, Etta Mil
lett in Cottage Grove.
Helen Breshears is employed as
bookkeeper at the Henderson bro
thers garage.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Whillock were
Pendleton visitors Thursday.
Jerrine Edwards is attending a
C. E. convention in Athena.
Marvin Cox spent the week end
here from Portland.
Mrs. George AUyn entertained
with a utensil demonstration din
ner Tuesday evening.
Hail storms hit the local farm
lands Sunday afternoon and Roy
Campbell reported two inches of
hail at his farm home at 7 in the
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jackson re
turned home Wednesday evening
from a visit in Eugene with their
son Kenneth.
Esther Thompson has returned to
the Elmer Hunt home from a Pen
dleton hospital and is greatly im
proved. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Scott and
sons Jerry and Timmy were supper
guests at the Merritt Grey home
Thursday.
HARDMAN NEWS
LaVern Hams Weds
Mabel Davidson
By ELSA M. LEATHERS
Carl Leathers, Darrel Farrens,
Victor and Jim Lovgren and Carl
McDaniel all fot their elk the last
few days of the season. "Monday
saw many going into Heppner to
check out.
Mr. and Mrs. George Sigmon and
daughter, Mary Alice, of Dufur vis
ited Mr. and Mrs. Delvin McDaniel
over the week end. Mrs. Sigmon is
Mrs. McDaniels sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Loy McFerrin and
daughters went to Baker to visit
over the week end.
Mesdames Carl Leathers, Carey
Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon
Page Three
Washington, D. C, Nov. 20. Dave
Beck of Seattle, who was charged
with Al Rosser with being a con
spirator in the operation of "goon
squads" in Oregon, has called on his
teamsters union to boycott Yakima
valley fruit because he wants a
closed shop, which is what John L.
Lewis demanded of the captive coal
mines. Mr. Beck (Rosser is now ser
ving a term in Oregon penitentiary
for his part in the conspiracy) will
probably soon find himself up again
st labor legislation which will curb
strikes and the closed shop move
ment until after the duration.
Part of the program initiated in
Yakima valley is to extend opera
tions into Oregon, if the Washington
affair is successful, and go after
the fruitmen of Hood River, The
Dalles, Medford and the Willamette
valley. Beck, himself, will not en
ter Oregon territory; his activities
with the goons are on record in the
office of the governor and he has
avoided the state since his hench
men were put in prison.
The revolt in the house of repre
sentatives over repeal of the neu
trality bill (arming merchant ships
and sending them into combat wat-
Hastings, Charles McDaniel, Gilbert
Coats and Owen Leathers attended
the very large miscellaneous show
er Wednesday afternoon at Mrs. C.
G. Wright's home for Mrs. Harold
Wright. Mrs. Orin Wright and Mrs.
Ray Wright were joint hostesses.
Dainty refreshments were jen-ed.
Mr. and Mjrs. E. J. Merrill were
business visitors in Heppner Satur
day. Mr. and Mrs. Duff McKitrick and
son visited over the week end at
Hardman from Zornes camp. Har
lan Adams come over with them
and visited his family.
Clarence Moore moved his family
from Heppner to the Neal Knighten
ranch here this week, where they
will farm and send their daughter
to school.
Ed McDaniel returned from Lone
Rock where he has been the past
month, visiting his son, Carl.
The grade and high school enter
tained the parents of the children
in honor of national education w.-.ck.
Each room gave a small program
then punch and cookies were served.
Mrs. C. H. McDaniel went to
Zomes camp on Wednesday to help
her sister, Mrs. Bert Bleakmqn, who
is cooking there. Mrs. Bleakman has
been ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Bryce Keene and
son moved to the Craber place on
the Heppner-Spray road this week.
Mr. Keene's father rented the place
from Ed Craber and will winter his
sheep there.
Mrs. Barton Clark and small son
visited at her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Wright, this week, and Mrs.
Wright's mother, Mrs. Chapin, from
Monument.
LaVern Hams was manied last
week in Idaho to Miss "Sue" Mabel
Davidson of Heppner. LaVern is
the youngest son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Hams and is known by his
many friends as "Pete."
Mrs. Helen Stevens and son Bob
by attended the surprise birthday
party Tuesday afternoon for the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Earl McKinney on
Rhea creek.
Mrs. Walter Wright visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Farrens,
a couple of days this week at Bur
ton Valley.
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Carmichael of
Lexington visited at the Owen "Lea
thers home Armistice day.
Owen Robinson of Pondosa visit
ed his father, Les Robison, and fam
ily Thursday. He also visited his
brother, Delbert, at Joe Batty's
ranch on the John Day river.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam McDaniel, Jr.,
moved home from Reed's mill where
they have worked this summer.
The high school students enjoyed
a weiner roast Armistice night.
ers) was only curbed by President
Roosevelt sending the house a letter
in which many members under
stood him to mean that he would
support bills to stop strikes in de
fense plants if they would vote for
repeal. This repeal finally carried
by a bare 18 votes.
.
Insiders assert tlial price control
legislation will not be passed on by
the senate until late in December,
probably not before January. There
is dissatisfaction with the price fix
ing bill brought in by the ways and
means committee, which held hear
ings for months. Neither the admin
istration nor congressmen like the
bill and before a vote comes it will
be so amended that its authors will
not recognize it. One group in "con
gress wishes to slap a lid on farm
products, but the farm bloc objects
to tampering with farm prices until
there is a ceiling on Ivages, arguing
that everything the farmer buys is
high and getting higher because of
the labor market. Farmers explain
that they would be satisfied with
present prices if they had the old
cost of production. For the time
being the major legislation to be
disposed of is the price fixing bill.
There is considerable resentment
in the national capital at the num
ber of British who have come to the
United States dukes, lords, knights
and just plain subjects. Feeling is
against the British because of tiheir
supposed uppishness and their pre
ference for playing on their own
tennis courts and golf courses, and
their repeated assertions that "This
is your war; why don't you get in?"
Lord Halifax, British ambassador,
has sensed this feeling of Americans
and is trying to overcome it. Once
a week, in the embassy, all of the
British who can crowd into the place
are given a lecture on the history
of the United States, its geography,
industries, recreations and the var
ious types of people. Young cadets
who are being trained for the RAF
have been furnished with a book
written for the purpose of explain
ing that the Americans are not En
glishmen; that there are all sorts of
Europeans in the United States, and
because English and Americans
speak the same language their ideas
are not necessarily the same nor
their cause common.
The book for RAF fliers advises
that when an American inquires,
"How do you like us?" it is not
dipomatic to begin telling the things
the Britisher does not like; the thing
to do is to discuss the points the
visitor appreciates. In the book and
at the embassy stress is laid that
Americans must not be judged by
motion pictures; that these pictures
are as far wrong in depicting Am
ericans as the screen is in showing
a true Britisher.
Secretary "Morgenthau's proposal
for saving one billion dollars a year
for the duration contains one point
that will not meet with favor in sev
eral parts of Oregon. The secretary
would like to "freeze" reclamation
projects and not initiate any new
ones until peace comes. The secre
tary suggests that the reclamation
engineers and the army engineers
resurvey various projects and deter
mine which can wait. This applies
also to flood control, such as the
Willamette valley project, and every
river and harbor project from one
end of Oregon to the other.
It is certain, however, that re
trenchment on non -defense agencies
NINTH IN FARM JUICE
Oregon has made such rapid ad
vances in farm electrification that
it has jumped from fourteenth to
ninth rank in the nation since 1934,
according to figures released by the
Rural Electrification Administration.
Only 23 per cent of Oregon farms
were electrified in 1934, while to
day 72 per cent of the farms are
receiving the advantages of rural
electrification. The national per
centage of electrified farms rose
from 11 to 35 per cent in the same
period.
HADDOX RELEASED
McClellan Field, Calif., Nov. 19.
Private Gerald C. Haddox of Hepp
ner, Ore., 2nd Supply Squadron,
McCHlan Field, Calif., has been re
lieved from active service and has
returned to civilian life as a mem
ber of the Enlisted Reserve corps,
under provisions of the law author
izing release of men over 28 years
of age.
RAUCII IN KENTUCKY
Fort Knox, Ky. Nov. 19. Emil H.
Rauch, 21, of Lexington, Ore., has
arrived at Ft. Knox for his basic
training at the armored force re
placement training center.
and activities will soon be started,
but before a slash is made the spe
cial joint committee of house and
senate will find every agency pro
testing against a cut in its funds and
arguing that the work it does is in
som fashion connected with nation
al defense. Oregon is an exception
but the sale of defense bonds has
fallen down and it is this loss of
revenue that is. worrying Secretary
Morgenthau.
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