Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1942)
Want Ads Good house for sale. W. end of Baltimore St. A Q. Thomson. 14-15p Found Defense stamps. Owner may have by telling number and describing package, at G. T. Lost Lady's rimless glasses in "Borg" case. Mrs. R. C. Lawrence. Apricots ripe now. Bring contain ers. Other fruit in season. W. T. Bray, Umatilla, Ore. 14-15. Apricots ripening July 12 to 25; $1.40 apple box, $1.20 in half -ton lots. Edmonds Orchard; Umatilla, Ore. For a delicious Fourth of July picnic or dinner, get tender, delic ious N. H. fryers. Live or dressed. Call 3F4 or at Ed Clark ranch. Found pair of small glasses. Ow ner call at this office and identify. Wanted Job of tending header on combine with some one who has long run. Lotus Robison, Heppner. 13-14p. Fryers for sale. Call 3F3. - 13-14. 2 purebred Aberdeen Angus bulls, good size, 15 mo. old; 8-yr. old team horses; lO-yr.-old team horses, all black, wt. 1600 lbs., for sale. Ralph Butler, Willows, Ore. Combine for sale, in good condi tion, nearly ready to go. See Sid Zinter. lQtf. For Sale New Hampshire baby chicks and started chicks. Chicks hatched each week. Suddarth Hat chery, Irrigon, Ore. 8-18. LIVESTOCK MARKET now open at Echo. Ore. Can handle all kinds of cattle. I. A. Witten, Box D, Echo, Oregon, phone 111. 27-34p. tf. New or Used Office Machines sold, serviced or rented. Leave word at Gazette Times office. 12tf. For Sale Model W Case combine in good condition. Good drapers and belts. Write Ivar E. Nelson, Kinzua, Oregon. 16p. Puppies for sale. Thorobred greyhound-stag. Phone 4F14 or inquire at G. T. . 13-14. One used McCormick-Deering 6 foot cut binder for sale or trade. V. R. Runnion. 13-14p. O. M. YEAGER CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Cabinet and Mill Work HEPPNER, OREGON ONE-DAY CLEANING SERVICE Wednesday-Thuxsday-Friday HEPPNER CLEANERS NOW HERE FACTORY MACHINE for lawnmower sharpening. We'll make your lawnmower like new. We also do saw filing, bi cycle repairing, floor sanding, knife and scissor sharpening and band saw work. N. D. Bailey BIFF AND BANG 0 VN v . Acofi x. mm " How to Display j Ceiling Price may be shown for a group of identical items on the same shelf -such as canned tomatoes. U.-O. Starting Reserve Enlistment Program University of Oregon, Eugene, July 2. The University of Oregon next year expects to enlist every qualified student in one of the mil itary reserve programs now avail able at the university and by enlist ment enable the student to continue his education until called into ac tive service, it was announced by Dr. Carl F. Kossack, chairman of the newly formed bureau of military information and placement. This program is a direct out growth of a joint request by the army and the navy for the univer sity to continue and also to expand its work in training officers and specialists for the war effort. A part of freshman week at the opening of fall term will be given over to the bureau for presenting information on the various reserve programs to entering freshmen. Stu dents will be given a series of tests to determine their aptitudes and university physicians will give them examinations to determine any psy sical deficiencies which would bar them from any particular service. "It is the aim of the bureau to aid in placing students in the pro per military reserve program ac cording to their special abilities, their physical qualifications and their personal preferences," Dr. Kos sack said. Open to students are four pro grams of officer-training and two of special services. They are as fol lows: Army reserves, offering both basic and advanced courses; army air corps reserves, leading to com missions as flight and ground offi cers; marine corps reserves; naval reserves, with three programs V-l basic naval officer training, V-5 flight officer training, and V-7 deck and engineer officer training; CPT, both flight and ground school cour ses; and scientific research training. Ceiling Prices DSC Circulars Stress 'Less Sugar' Canning Three more bulletins and circulars dealing with home food preserva tion and sugar conservation have just been issued at Oregon State college, to be added, to the growing number of aids for the homemaker's kitchen "office." A new printed bulletin entitled "Home Food Preservation" cover ing canning, drying, and salting, is by Lucy A. Case, extension nutri tionist, and is published as extension bulletin No. 596. With a previous bulletin on "Food Preservation by Freezing," it provides the latest guide on the current drive for maximum home food processing. How to save sugar when preserv ing fruits by canning and freezing is covered from slightly different angles in two recent publications. One, by E. H. Wiegand and Gladys Hedlund of the food industries de partment, regards the results of re cent tests made with the use of dextrose, glucose, and honey, in ad dition to ordinary cane or beet su gar. Dextrose is a pure simple sugar made from corn and obtainable un der several trade names. Glucose, or corn syrup, was formerly . abun dant on grocers' shelves in either the white or brown form, but both it and dextrose are less abundant for the time being because of the increased demand. Because of its heavy density, corn syrup is best diluted when used for canning or freezing, the circular points out. The amount of honey usable in canned or frozen fruit is limited because of the intense flavor it imparts. Tests indicated that it is best used in combination with other sugars. A second circular issued as a home economics extension mimeograph is by Lucy A. Case, extension nutri tionist, and Thomas Ornsdorff, as- Heppner Gazette sociate professor of food industries. It reviews the various strengths of syrup used in canning and tells how to prepare these, giving measure ments in simple terms. Hints on how to obtain maximum sweet taste for a minimum of sugar are in cluded. Copies of all three of these pub lications may be obtained at any county extension office or direct from the college. APPLES SUBSTITUTE SWEETS Spokane, Wash. "Apples carry their own sugar," says a recent bul letin of the Washington State Apple Commission, "it is interesting to ob serve that about 15.4 per cent of the average apple is solid matter. The remainder is water. Of this solid matter a small amount is protein, fat, fiber, and minerals and the re mainder or about three fourths is sugar. lerefore, no one needs to starve for sweets so long as one has apples.' ' NOTICE OF SALE OF COUNTY PROPERTY BY VIRTUE OF AN ORDER OF THE COUNTY COURT, dated June 8, 1942, I am authorized and directed to advertise and sell at public auc tion at not less than the minimum price herein set forth: Lots 1 and 2 in Block 26 of Irrigon, Oregon for the minimum price of $20.00, cash. Lots 3 and 4 in Block 1, Cluff s 1st Addition to City of lone, Ore gon for the minimum price of $20.00, cash. Lot 41 in Block 28, Irrigon, Oregon for the minimum price of $5.00, cash. . Lots 1 and 2 in Block 18, Ir rigon, Oregon for the minimum price of $20.00, cash. THEREFORE, I will on the 11th day of July, 1942, at the hour of 10:00 A. M., at the front door of the Court House in Heppner, Mor- liuiuiiiliiiuiUliiiiliiii WE NEVER PULL OUR PUNCHES QOOD PRINTING is not only our business but also a hobby of ours. We never pull our punches but Rive all we have on every job. We are equipped to assist you in laying out the job with correct type faces, proper paper stock and with illustrations, if desired. We print business stationery of all kinds, letterheads, invoices, bill heads, blotters, order blanks, envelopes, folders and ruled forms. Also catalogues, broadsides, booklets, posters, show cards, etc., etc. Our prices are most reasonable and our service is always prompt HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES Morrow County's Newspaper WNU Service Times, July 2, 1942 7 row County, Oregon, sell said prop erty to the highest and best bid der. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff, Morrow County, Oregon. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Notice is hereby given that Alma E. Morgan, administratrix jf the es tate of Melissa Marlatt, deceased, has-filed her final account with the County Court of the State of Ore gon, and said Court has set as the time and place for hearing on and final settlement of said final account, Monday, the 3rd day of August, 1942 at the hour of 10:00 A. M., of said day, in the County Court Room of the Morrow County Court House in Heppner, Oregon. All persons having objections to said final ac count must file the same on or be fore said date. Dated and first published this 25th day of June, 1942. ALMA E. MORGAN, Administratrix. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY GUARDIAN Notice is hereby given that, in pursuance of an order made and entered by Bert Johnson, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Morrow, on the 23rd day of June, 1942, for the sale of real property hereinaf ter described, I will sell at public or private sale, to the highest bid der for cash, at the Standard Ser vice Station, in Boardman, Morrow County, Oregon, on or after the 25th day of July, 1942, at the hour of 10:00 A. M., the following described real property, to-wit: Lots 11 & 12 of Block 8 and Lot 7 of Block 5, all in Board man, Morrow County, Oregon. Said sale will be open one hour. Dated this 24th day of June, 1942. CRYSTAL BARLOW, Guardian of the Estate of Chloe Barlow, minor. llllllllllilllllllllUllllUlll' j By F. H. Cumberwortb xiW.iil'X. VN VA"' ,N