Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 17, 1944)
6 Heppner Gazette Times, August 17, 1944 EOARDMAN NEWS Br MABGABET THORPE Wilbur Pearson was taken to the Hermiston hcrpitr Wednesday evening following a kick in the chest bv a cow. He had been on the verge of pneumonia and the injury brought it en sooner. He rfctu-ned home Saturd' v much improved. HEC met. t Mt.. Bouey's with Mrs. Briggs as joint hostess. A large crowd attended. The noxt meeting will hz n.t the grange ha!l the fi-:;t Thursday in September to c'n-n the hall for the grange fair which will bs held Sept. 9. Harry Thorpe mnde a business trip to Hcpr-ie:- Friday. He wai ac companied, bv Be: nadin o H-vcrzn and Mrs. Nrthan Thorpe and child ren. Mrs. Bill Lilly was taken to the , Hermiston hospital Thursday suf fering from ? gall bladder attack. She returned much improved. Mr. and. Frs. F'don Shannon and daughter returned home from the coast F.idry whc;e he haj been working. family. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Tanne hill and Keith, Mr. and Mrs. Na than Thorpe and children, Mr. and Mrs. Eller and family, High Hoff man, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Marlow ,:J f.ir.ii'y, yic. a;d Mid. Dan Han fief, Mrs. Margaret Hamilton and children, Mr. and Mrs. George Daniel, Mr. and Mrs. Deibert Car penter and children. Mr. and Mrs. Roach and the host and hostess, .Liui A'l.kerman ie. t Tuesday 1.10. ning for Soap Lake lor medical I. raiment. ivlr. and Mrs. Al Macombsr and lamily lelt Sunday for their home at Spray. and Mrs;. V::ncn Root and son of Athena spent Sunday at the Leo Root home. Frank Marlow rc.mr;d he from Pendleton Saturday where he recently underwent an operation. M:-s. FMon Wilson and daughttr came from Portland Wednesday to visit at the Ray Brown and Robert Wilson homes. Mr:,. Blanche Shannon passed away Saturday afternoon following a heart attack. She had been ill with heart trouble for several years. Mrs. Shannon has lived in Board -man lor nearly 15 years. Funeral services were held Wednesday at Weiser, Ida. She is survived by two sons and a daughter; Eldon and Mrs. Doris Lilly of Boardman and Norval of. Los Angeles; also four grandchildren. Frances Skoubo spent Sunday at home. She returned Monday morn ing to Bingham Springs. Ted Ekker of the U. S. Navy spent Sunday visiting friends on the project. Te left Monday morning for Hood River to visit his father. Guest at the Lehman home over the week-end was Mr. Lehman's mother. Harry Thorpe and Chas. Dillon each took a load of cattle to Port land Sunday. A picnic was held at the Lehman home Sunday. Those present were iff md Mr. and M.S. ilucse'! Irrigon News Notes By MBS. J. A. SHOUH Mrs. Roy Minnick and daughter Luella left for Spokane Saturday to visit their son and brother Le roy Minnick S 2!c who is stationed at Faiiagut but who will meet them in Spokane. Cpl Doug Whipple, who h?.s seen service in Australia and New Gui nea has been in Tacoma and Se Wh for a lew days and is to arrive with Mrs. Whipple Tusrsdny evs J i;:;; according to a wire received ..'jor.i him,. Mr. and Mrs. Ervin T7b:pple jre aYo expected Tues day evening to visit with the H. H. Whipples. Doug has been gone al most four years. Mrs. Tom Caldwell left for Port laud Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Adams were visitors at The DaP.es Sunday bringing their .gons Don.;: Id and Robtrt home with them. Wm. Allen is back from Heppner and Portland where he took his physical exam. He is back at his job at the Holub ranch near Penr 'dleton for the present. Mr. and Mrs. Adren Allen and two children came up. from The Dalles and took Mrs. C. W. Acock and daughter Luolla down there. They spent a wtek there. Chas. Acock Jr. went down Sunday and brought '.hem i-.orne. Boy ii in a . buvu'h of bomber made a mistake pr.d bombid the Acock turkey pen but did no dam age. There weie pits to show where "the Lo.rbj hi.. Mr. and M s. P,oy Va- C" ve of Kennewick arrived Monday to vis it their daughter Mrs. Mil 'on Bailey and family. Mrs. Bailey, Mrs. Van Cleve and J. A. Shoun were Hep pner visitors Monday. George Linn of Boardmon was an Irrigon visitor Monday. Jack White and Darrel Cowgill spent a few days at Jerry White's leaving Monday for Freewater. The E. R. Schneiders returned from Freewater Friday where they had been at the Pentecostal camp meeting. Mrs. Hazel Steagall will drive one' of the school buses this fall. Mrs. Nora Wison has had her son Joe home for 10 days. He left for a California camp Wednesday.. Mrs. Bessie Edward and two children of Cook, Wash., arrived Thursday to visit her mother and ot'ior rchti'es. Her husband, Herb i-a. can:--up Sunday and took ht-r and the children home. Mrs. Wilson's son Chester and family of New Mead ows arrived Wednesday and are spending some time here with all of the rest. The watermelon men are busy picking and delivering their ripe melons. Among those in this vici nity are Don Kenny, Glen Aldrich, H. H. Whipple, Provancho & Sparks, Paul Slaughter and the Haddox's. Verna May Sauter of -The Dalles is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Paul Ha berlein and family. Mrs. Mike Hinkley went out to the Ordnance hospital Sunday. The Jack Bomes took her there. Mrs. Cora Williams of Tillamook arrived Wednesday - to visit her sister, Mrs. Wm. Gollyhom and family. She went to Pendleton Wed nesday to meet her son Cpl Williams who has been stationed in Mexico. Fred Houghton was a Pendleton visitor Saturday. The Marshall Markham, Harvey Warner and Batie Rand families spent the week-end at Freewater attending the Pentecostal camp meeting. Mrs. Liiie Warner also was there. Mrs. Walter Agee of Umatilla was an Irrigon visitor Sunday. Mrs. White is back on the mail route after spending a week taking a car to Reno, Nev. "Why ain't ye?" "Standin' in a b'ar trap." Rox bury (Mass.) Gazette. DELAYED Grandpappy Morgan, a hillbilly of the Ozarks, had wandered off into the woods and failed to return for supper so young Tolliver was sent to look for him. He found him standing in the bushes. "Getting dark, Grandpap," the tot ventured. "Yep." "Suppertime, Grandpap." "Yep." "Well, air ye comin' home? ' "Nope." P" WE arc pleased with the many friends we have made housewives who have exclaimed over the nutritional qualities of all our meals. Menus are carefully planned to give you good, wholesome, nu tritious foods. Breakfasts to give a mill or farm worker "something; to work on." Lunches arc always appe tizing. Dinners are always a treat for hungry families. YOU'RE ALWAYS WEL COME. Come in soon! r : Do you know about the crusade to lower the cost of hearing? ?..... If you find yourself training to hear ... if you can't "get" all that's said at home, at business, at thea tres or social gatherings, you owe it to yourself to try this sensational new hearing aid. At its low price, it is helping thousands who could not "afford" to hear. Let your own ears decide you will not be pressed to buy. New Radionic Hearing Aid HEPPNER CAFE $40 Readv to plate with radionto tubes, crystal micro photic, 4-position oat. sid tone control bat teries and battery saver circuit. Liberal guarantee. One model one price on qua' Zenith' fmtttk o 0090. Accepted hy America Med' kal Aetoeiatkm CouneO m Physical Therapy WtlnolteYou Gmim In for Demonstration Stram Optical Company Pendleton, Oregon v5 .J iJl-??":7--S. Sfr ft W 1 ... :. Br Z -tl laT C 3 Z3a 12 l-2c lb. " 28c lb Ability assd Hesi a particularly tough and important job comes v v along, it usually lands in the lap of someone who Is already doing a lot of other jobs well. People like this who are used to getting results aren't too plentiful. They need to have both ability and a sense of responsibility. One alone won't do for ability can sometimes be misdirected, and a sense of responsibility without ability can lead to troublesome meddling. It's men with this combination of talents who have been carrying a heavy load on the home front these past few years. On the farm and in industry they've been meeting and Solving the difficult wartime problems of production. After the war is won, somebody must shoulder the equally big job of getting this nation back into peacetime production, f laying the groundwork for the better and more prosperous America we all want. This is a challenge, and an opportunity, for the producers of America for the men and women who have sense of responsibility and have shown their ability to get things done. General Electric Co., Schenectady. N. n Hef Ike General tlectrta nolo roa'rainsi "Die C I Alt-gM Orehettra'' leeenr 10 Mb IWT,HK The WW Today" newt, every weekday 4.45 ja, IWT, Of BUY WAR BONDS GENERAL H ELECTRIC Lard, Pure Ml. 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