Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1944)
8 Heppner Gozette Times, February 3, 1944 Highways To Health MILK IS PRECIOUS Milk dealers are now limited by government ' order in the amount of milk and certain milk products which they call sell to their cus tomers. Fresh fluid milk is in this way made available for use by our soldiers. Milk, butter, cheese and ice cream are demanded in tremendous quantities for camps, training cen ters and defense plants in this country. Dairy products which can be shipped abroad in compact form especially dried milk, cheese and butter are required in increasing amounts for the armedl forces jLn every part of the world, for lend lease and for foreign civilian relief. And along with this civilian dmands for milk are greater than ever be fore. All of this added together means there is a critical need for conser vation oif fresh milk in order to make the supply of all dairy pro ducts go around. You and your family may not get as much milk at all times aa nutritionists recom mend. This means using milk to the best advantage using every precious drop; protecting its food value and flavor for greatest nour ishment and enjoyment; and! 'pro viding it first and in greatest quan tity to those who need it most. The reason for these increased de mands for mik is because it is na ture's most neary perfect food. It provides strength and stamina for the fighting forces on the war front and for the workers in our ship yards and factories. It supplies vi tal food elements which build resistance to dtisease and fatigue. It supplies essential minerals, vita mins and proteins for body repair and for a more active life. ' .. That's why government authori ties insist that milk and milk pro ducts be made available to those on Whom victory depends most. That's why you may have to limit your milk supply until victory is won. If this is necessary, be a good Home Front trooper and accept your share with a smile. And remember yocr milkman is doing his best for you. Your part in" the conservation program can be summed up in these few helpful hints: 1. Order only as much milk as you actually need and place your order in advance. 2. Take in your milk promptly and place in top or coolest part of your refrigerator 3. Keep your milk tightly cover ed and do not allow it to "stand" in a warm room. 4. Use milk in cooking to improve the flavor and increase the food value of other foods. 5. Cooperate with your milk deal er. He is doing his best to supply your needs. He is survived by his children, Crockett Sproules and Mrs. L. A. Darland, and one grandson and one granddaughter, DRIVES TO PORTLAND Barton Clark drove to Portland the first of the week to have some dental work done. He was accom panied by Mrs. Verle Frederickson who was called to the city by the illnes of her mother, Donnie Hiatt, on a trip, and Crocket Sprouls who leaving to enter the merchant marine. To buy, sell or trad1;, use the G-T advertising column JOHN MANNING SPROULES Commitment services were held here Tuesday for John Manning Sproules, whose death occurred at his home at Homestead, Ore. Satur day, Jan. 29. Deceased was a native Oregonian, born at Oregon City, Nov. 30, 1875. He was the last mem ber of his immediate family. Mr. Sproules was married in 1901 to Jennie Kirk, sister of Mrs. Emma Jones of Heppner, and to this union were born two children, Crockett and Ilene. The mother died June 30, 1915, and the father later moved to the Homestead sec tion where he continued to live un til death came. A heart attack, apparently at breakfast time, was the cause of death. When neighbors went to the house late in the day they found the body in an upright position on the woodbox. The stove was open as if he had started to build a fire when the attack came Something NEW In Insurance See Bil! Isom about 80 per cent collision on your car. B. E. ISOM Heppner, Oregon STAR Reporter Friday-Saturday, Feb. 4-5 Riders of the Deadline William Boyd, Andy Clyde, Jimmy Rogers, Herbert Rawlinson Hopalong Cassidy again goes into action to bring about justice. This iiuuju uie ujjpearaiiue oi Jimmy Rogers (son of the late Will Rogers) as Hopalong side-kick. PLUS PISTOL PACKIPr MAMA Ruth Terry, Bob Livingston, Wally Vernon, Jack LaRue A two-gun girl gambler of the West is taken for her bankroll by a city slicker but she soon has him crying "Put that pistol down, Babe!" A fast-moving hit with the' greatest novelty song of the decade. Sunday-Monday, Feb. 6-7 BIG PURC HASE Ab ove suspicion Joan Crawford, Fred MacMurray Conrad Veidt, Basil Rathbone, Reginald Owen A honeymoon in before-the-war Germany is converted into a thrill ing search. Tuesday, February 8 Banjo on My Knee (A re-issue) Barbara Stanwyck, Joel McCrca, Walter Brennan Tried and true entertainment con cerning uniquely interesting per sons against a setting of Mississippi shanty-boats and New Orleans cafe life. Wednesday-Thursday, Feb. 9-10 Destroyer Edward G. Robinson, Glenn Ford, Marguerite Chapman, Edgar Bu chanan A stirring salute to America's trim and trusty fighting craft ... as salty as an octopus and just as gripping . . . with a constant thread of comedy. All brand new spring prints the best we've seen in a long time at such a tiny price I Monotones and bright multi-colored designs gay floral patterns. r ! I i . . I laiiorea snmwaisr ana button-front styles pleated and gored skirts unusual trim ming details I Sizes for misses and women Truly wonderful values at 3.98 7 0 (o 1 7aOCDQ 0079 fOnly in the y: 1 I 7irt$fotit JL Jmk DELUXE MV I CHAMPION fffffjf j Will You Find: UUifl A I 1. 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