2 Heppner Gazette Times, February 22, 1945 News Notes of Comings and Goings in lone and Vicinity B was. ohab KiETMAUBf iem Harry of Olympia, Wash, and Berle Akers underwent an appen- Frank of lone; five grandchildren dicitis operation at The Dalles hos- and six great grandchildren, pital Sunday. He is reported getting The lone basketball team won 32 along satisfactorily. to 11 over Irrigon Friday of last Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ritchie and week. Tuesday night they were de son Clyde were Portland visitors Seated by Stanfield 43-21. last week-end. Mrs. Omar Rietmann and son Liar- Mrs. John Benson ( Hildegard ry were Portland visitors last week. Williams,) a former teacher in lone Mrs. Clarence Harris spent the was the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. week-end in Vancouver with Pvt. Franklin Lindstrom last week. Harris. While here she visited many of her David Rietmann took his son former pupils. She also called on Wayne to The Dalles Thursday for Mrs. Harriet Brown of' Hermiston. treatment for a foot infection. Mr. and Mrs. Lindstrom and sons Wednesday eveningPPhoebe accompanied Mrs. Benson to Port- The Topic dub party for Febru land when she returned to her home . in San Francisco, Saturday. was at. the home of and Mrs. Ruin Mason returned home Mrs H" K Yarne11 Saturday Feb" from Portland Friday. 17. Five tables of bridge were in The ladies missionary meeting Py- Prizes were won by guests, will be held March 9 with Mrs. Ella Mrs' Ella Davidson and Blaine Isorn Davidson and Mrs. H. N. Waddell Sh. nd Mrs- Maude Holt , and Werner metmann low; oy memDers, Mrs. Noel Dobyns and Victor Riet- high, Mrs Echo Palmateer as hostesses. Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Morgan were hosts for the Omeca club valentine mann and Bert Mason low. Hosts were party ai meir im,iC ..c-, Mf gnd Mrg R R Yarnell, Mr. and evening. Twenty-one members and nr -j ivr their husbands wer present. Dive tables of pinochle were played. Mrs. Donald Heliker and Darrell Pad berg won high and Mrs. Walter Cor ley and Donald Heliker won low. The Cooperative church fellow ship supper was held on Wednesday evening at the Congregational rooms with 39 present. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Lindstrom entertained Wednesday evening in honor of Mrs John Benson. Mrs. Charles O'Cnnor, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gorger and Mrs. May Swan son. . Pressure Cooker Gauges and Valves Should Be Tested By Cecilia Van Winkle State and feredal nutrition auth orities recommend that pressure Born to Mr. and Mrs. Richard ?ke,r and safety valves be Lundell at St Anthony's hospital in annuauy is important ut Pendleton February 16, an 8 pound e testin& replacements and repair daughter who has been named PJf e cook?rs Re made early. Sharon Lee Manufacturers stress that now is Charles Nord of Portland spent time n ,handl r Friday evening at the Ray Barnett Palrs Prompty. Much delay will be home necessary in handling requests in Mrs. Frances Jones of Wilbur, summer. Gauge and safety val- Wash. was a guest of her cousin, m? teste? no? at the Food Mrs. Ida Grabill, last week. J"1"" department' at 'ngm Mr. and Mrs. Everett Keithley State colleSe- moved to Heppner last Wednesday. Directions on guage and safety Graveside services were conduct- valve testing: ed for Mrs. Sarah Ann Lindsay of Salem at the I. O. O. F. cemetery at lone Tuesday by Rev. H. N. Wad dell. Mrs. Lindsay, who was 92 1. Remove from cover with a wrench. Do not send lid. 2. Attach name and address to back of gauge and safety valve with years of age, had been making her scotch or adhesive tape. Do not use home with her son Fred Lindsay mucilage. at Salem for the past 20 years. Sur- 3. Pad generously with paper and viving are two daughters, Mrs. Net- pack Into small box or can, prefer tie Brock and Mrs. Job Crabtree of ably with a piece of cardboard over Salem and three sons, Fred of Sa- the glass face. OPA Odd Lot Rel ease RATION FREE February 19 to March 3 1945 inclusive SEE OUR RATION FREE SHOES ON THE ABOVE DATES. From 50c to $5 NO STAMP!! GONTY'S Phone 104-3 kr- From where I sit ...hit Joe Marsh, &MIN-K. Mi -a-n't Trophies of a Happy Marriage The Cuppers are about the hap piest married couple in our town. Comfortable off, too, after Dee's fifty years of honest vork. But their two most prized pos sessions are an old beer mug and an 1800 Floradora hat. When they were first married, Dee allows he couldn't stand the hat; while Jane turned her nose up (privately) at Dee's fondness for a friendly glass of beer from time to time. But each figured It was the other's right . . so they lived and let live. And as time went by, they realized that the hat and mug had become, important symbols in their marriage -symbols of respect for each other's rights and differences of opinion, From where I sit, a lot of mar riages would be happier if there were more funny-looking hats and old beer mugs in the back ground. Tolerance Is a mighty good foundation for living hap pily together. 4. Mail to Thomas Onsdorff, Food dial faces can be replaced at the canning season. All the new can Industries department, Oregon State Food Industries department at 25 ners will be aluminum. College, Corvalhs, Oregon. Send 50 cents each. If the gauges are cents per gauge and 25 cents per brought to the county extension safety valve. This rate includes re- office in Heppner, the emergency turn postage. Do not send gauges assistant will send them to the which have an extremely rusted testing laboratory for you. dial face or which are obviously The War Production Board has broken. Money would be saved by authorized the production of 630,- buying a new gauge. Broken glass 000 pressure canners before next THERE MUST BE A GOOD REASON There is a reason for everything and the fact that we serve the best meal in town ac counts for the ever increasing popu larity of this place. If you are not a patron now you soon will be No. 105 of a Series Copyright. 1945. United States Brewers Foundation Yours Better for Eats HEPPNER CAFE man 1 Wo OOD really needs no introduction to America. It has built most of America's millions of homes, has given us paper and innumerable other products. Perhaps you won't recognize wood after this war is over. Sd many new uses are being developed that it has become known as our most versatile raw material. The most important fact about wood is that it is a renewable natural resource. We may run out of minerals, but trees grow. Forest industry operators, custodians of our commercial trees, recognize this fact. Harnessing growth, they are using wood today, and producing more wood for the future. A forest isn't a mine, that can only be depleted. It is a farm that can produce forever. I It- A KINZUA PINE MILLS COMPANY