Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1942)
I) 4 Heppner Gasette Times, September 3, 1942 WHiniiiiniHMiiiiniiintmnnHnnn" At Heppner CHURGHES DAILY VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL The churches of Heppner will close their Vacation Bible school with a program of music and dem onstration at Christ of Christ this Friday evening at 7:30 p. m. Every one is invited to attend. ST. PATRICK'S CHURCH Rev. Francis McCormack, Pastor Schedule of services: Heppner: Mass at 9:00 a.m. every Sunday except 3rd. Mass on 3rd Sunday at 10:30. lone: 10:30 a.m. on 1st Sunday. 9:00 a.m. on 3rd Sunday. Lena: 10:30 a. m. on 2nd and 4th Sundays. Week-day mass at 7:30 a.m. Firs. Friday, 7:30 a.m. Confessions: Saturdays, 7:30 to 8:00 p.m. Sundays, 8:15 to 8:55 ajn. ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 14th Sunday after Trinity. Holy communion, 11 a. m. Officiant: Eric 0. Robathan, archdeacon blue frock with a corsage of pink rosebuds and bouvardia. They were, accompanied by Mr. Marshall's grandfather, Sylvester Jamison, and his aunt, Mrs. Vivian Snowberger, of Ontaria. The young couple are at home at the Zinter Apartments. Mrs. Marshall will be secretary at the Heppner school this year. John Parker, son of Mr. and Mtj. F. S. Parker, and Card Greaves, auditor for the state tax commis sion, were in Heppner yesterday. They are from Portland. The regular meeting of the Hepp ner Chamber of Commerce, sched uled for last Tuesday evening, was postponed. Mrs. T. V. Arneiter of Portland visited in Heppner last Monday. She came in the interests of the National Federation of Music, of which Mrs. Kate Dell Marden is district president of Oregon, Wash ington and Idaho. Mrs. Marden is a former Heppner resident. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner of Portland became the parents of a baby daughter on August 30. She will be called Mary Elizabeth. Mrs. William Smethurst of Lex ington, is confined to the hospital in Pendleton where she will under go a major operation. She is the sister of Mrs. Earl Gordon of this city. THE METHODIST CHURCH Bennie Howe, minister Sunday, Sept. 6th: Divine worship at 11 a. m. Church school at 9:45 a. m., Mrs. Lucy Rodgers, supt. Classes for all grades and ages. Evening worship at 7:45 p. m. Wednesday, Sept. 9th: Fellowship meeting every Wed nesday evening at 7:45. Thought for today: How many of you who seldom go to church would choose to live in a community that had no church? 0. M. YEAGER CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Cabinet and Mill Work HEPPNER, OREGON ONE-DAY CLEANING SERVICE Wednesday -Thursday-Friday HEPPNER CLEANERS NOW HERE FACTORY MACHINE for lawnmower sharpening. Well 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 Hardman News . . . ' By ELsa M. Leathers HARDMAN, Sept. 3. Roy Robin son shipped 19 head of Hereford bulls to Elko, Nev., this week, to enter them in the sale Sept. 7. He shipped early due to the unstable conditions on the railroad now. War material is shipped before anything else. Mr. and Mrs. Owen Leathers and son moved this week to the gar age building where they have t the post office, oil and gas. They have their living quarters there also. Sam Johnson of Spray will move the phone switch soon. Mrs. Holly Leathers is visiting her son and family, the C. E. Leath ers, at Reeds Mill, from Kimberley. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Steers and son Elmer moved home from Reeds Mill this week. Henry Coats, who was appointed by the high school as janitor the coming year is busy this week get ting things in order for school to begin Monday. Yvonne Hastings visited the past week in Heppner with Evelyn Mc Ferrin. Clara Bell Adams visited the Joe Batty s over Monday night, return ing home Tuesday. Mrs. Marvin Braunon returned from Portland Saturday where she has been visiting the past month. Mr. and Mrs. Braunon moved to Mt. Vernon Tuesday. Miss Nona Inspeek and brother Oscel visited at their home here Saturday evening from the lone district. Mrs. Maud Hayden and son Mar ion of Portland visited here brief ly Saturday. They were in eastern Oregon on business, returning to Portland on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Hastings and doughters spent Sunday at Bull Prairie with the Max Buschke's. Mrs. Ella Bleakman is busy this week getting her apartment ready for the high school teachers. Mrs. Raymond McDonald is assisting her. Florence Beymer of Heppner spent several days this week visit ing Miss Rita Mclntyre. Be Grant was a visitor at the Ad Inskeep home Saturday evening. Zelma McDaniel visited her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Way. at Lexington Monday. While cranking his tractor one day this week Clarence Moore was injured when the crank kicked back and broke several ribs. Mr. Moore was consulting a doctor in town Fri day and Saturday. Floyd Adams has been suffering this week from an infected knee. SCREENS You can help keep our army inter emptors and navy patrol planet flying. Every fire is an Axis fire. Don't blind the eyes of our de fense. Usa care in the woods. Help keep our slues clear. ITS UP TO YOU IN '42 Ym cm i ywr lw . . writ Km? Ortfo GrM Ann, StUoi, Ortqai When Eating in The Dalles REMEMBER JEFF'S CAFE GEORGE COOK, Prop. CHURCH OF CHRIST School days are here again. Why not begin your spiritual education , at the same time. You can find a class for your age at the Church of , Christ Bible School Sunday morn ing at 9:45 a. m. 11:00 a. m. Communion and preaching. 6:30 p. m. Christian Endeavor. 7:30 p. m. Evangelistic service. LOCAL ITEMS . . . Mrs. Robert Thompson, and her sister, Mrs. Jennie Loudons, with Mrs. Henry Aiken, left Tuesday for a few day in Portland. Walter. Moore of the Pendleton Production Credit Association of Pendleton spent Wednesday in Heppner. Mrs. Tom Mclntyre and two dau ghters left Tuesday for Portland, where they will spend several days. The marriage of Miss Ellen Hughes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hughes, to Keith Marshall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Marshall of Grants Pass, was solemnized last Wednesday morning at 10:30 o'clock in Weiser, Idaho. The wedding took place at the Christian church, with the Rev. Mr. C. C. Curtis officiating. The bride was dressed in a navy "What's it good for?" "Guns, tanks, and maybt part of a plane" tec susffiM' fa ife In the attics and cellars of homes, in garages, tool sheds, and on farms is a lot of Junk which is doing no good where it is, but which is needed at once to help smash the Japs and Nazis. Scrap iron and steel, for example. Old radiators, lengths of pipe, refrigerators, garbage pails, broken garden tools... It may be rusty, old "scrap" to you, but it is actually refined steel, with most impurities removed and can be quickly melted 'with new metal in the form of pig iron to produce highest quality steel for our war machines. Even in peacetime our Nation relied on scrap to provide about 50 of the raw material for steel. Now production of steel has gone up, up, UP, until today America is turning out as much steel as all the rest of the world com bined. But unless at least 6,000,000 addi tional tons of scrap steel is uncovered promptly, the full rate of production cannot be attained or increased; the necessary tanks, guns, and ships cannot be produced. The rubber situation is also critical. In spite of the recent rubber drive, there is a continuing need for large quantities of scrap rubber. Also for other waste mate rials and metals like brass, copper, zinc, lead, and tin. America'' needs your active assistance in rounding up these materials. The Junk which you collect is bought by industry from scrap dealers at estab lished, government-controlled prices. Will you help? First collect all your waste material and pile it up. Then sell it to a Junk dealer, give it to a charity, take it yourself to the nearest collection point, or get in touch with your Local Salvage Committee. If you live on a farm, consult your County War Board or your farm im plement dealer. Throw YOUR scrap into the fight! JUNK MAKES FIGHTING WEAPONS i si This message) approved by Conservation Division WAR PRODUCTION BOARD This advertisement paid for by the American Industries Salvage Committee (representing and with fundi provided by groups of leading industrial concern. J LOCAL SALVAGE COMMITTEE Phone: 132, Heppner One old radiator will provide scrap steel need ed for seventeen .30 calibre rifles. One old lawn mower will help make six 3-inch shells. One useless old . tire will pro. f f vide as much e a a a rubber as is used in 12 gas masks. One old shovel will help make 4 hand grenades. MATERIALS NEEDED Scrap iron and steel. Other metals of all kinds. Old rubber. Rags, Manila rope, burlap baf s. Waste Cooking Fats Strain Into Urge tin can and when you get a, pound or more, aell to your meat dealer. NEEDED ONLY IN CERTAIN LOCAUTIEJl Wait paper and tin cant, at announced locally. NOT NEEDED at this time : Raaor bladee-f laaa.