2 Heppner Gazette Times, May 10, 1945 IONE NEWS NOTES By MBS. OMAR RIETMANN Miss Patricia Emert, daughter of Mrs. Mary Emert of Hermiston and Pit Sgt Lee Pettyjohn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pettyjohn of Lexington, were married at the Methodist church in Pendleton at 5 p. m. Sunday, May 6. The bride wore a beautiful gown of white satin and was accompanied by Mrs. Emert as matron of honor. Fred Pettyjohn acted as best man for his son. A wedding dinner was served at the Pendleton hotel to 15 mem bers of the family and friends. Sgt and Mrs. Pettyjohn will leave May 20 for San Diego where he is to report for reassignment. Mr. and Mrs. Edmond Bristow and two of their sons and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wright and two sons all of Baker arrived Friday evening to visit relatives in lone. T Sgt Joseph Miller of Salem spent Wednesday and Thursday of last week in lone visiting his sister, Mrs. Garland Swanson. He has been in training at Camp Hood, Texas. A mother-daughter banquet is being sponsored by the Maranathas to be served at the Congregational church parlors Saturday at 7 p. m. This will be a pot luck dinner and every mother and her daughter (real or borrowed) is invited. Student body and faculty of the high school were entertained at a spring formal in the gym Friday evening.' The gym was decorated with large baskets of lilacs, tulips, iris and other spring flowers. Hosts and hostesses were Mr. and Mrs. Omar Rietmann, Mr. and Mrs. Wal ter Dobyns, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Drake and Mr. and Mrs. Victor Rietmann. Mrs. Mary Swanson returned Fri day evening from Salem and Port land. While in Portland she made the acquaintance of her new grand son William Elmo, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Swanson. Mrs. Terr el Benge of Heppner is convalescing at the home of her mother, Mrs. Lana Padberg. Miss Jane Huston and Miss Bar bara Lever chaperoned the high school girls at the Algott Lurtdell cabin in the mountains Saturday and Sunday. They reported a grand time. The May study meeting of the Topic club has been postponed un til May 18. Hostesses will be Mes dames E. R. Lundell, Cleo Drake and Clell Rae. Mrs. C. W. Barton, Mrs. Rudolph Misetech and Mrs. Robert Cason all from Portland came Monday evening to visit Mis. Lna Padberg. Cleo Drake has been employed by the commodity credit corpora tion to put their wheat bins in shape for use for the coming crop. Pvt Robert Botts came Saturday from Camp Roberts, Calif, to visit his family lor a 10 day furlough. Mrs. E. M. baiter local chairman of the Red Cross sewing has a num ber of hospital bags on hand to be made up. Anyone wishing to do this work may get them at the home of Mrs. Echo Palmateer. Cpl Daniel Ely, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ely of Morgan is on fur lough from Washington D. C. He is to report back May 1. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Blake, Joann and Donald and Mr. and Mrs. Ted Smith and Phillip of Heppner were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Rietmann. Four-H club girb met at the A. A. McCabe heme with their leader, Mrs. Lonnie M?Cabe. Pres ent were Lola ;nn McCabe, Ruby Ann Rietmann Dc1 -.res and Patri cia Drake, Lela Bo't.s. Tane Seeha fer and Mrs. Hovprd :."ubanks. VETERAN JEWEL PRESENTED At the regular meetiing of Sans Souci Rebekah lodge May 4, Mrs. Letha Archer was presented with a veteran's jewel for faithful ser vice to the lodge for a quarter of a century. Other business trans acted included voting membership dues to Tom Wells, member of the Seabees, and to give $5 to McCaw hospital. Refreshments were served, followd by a round table discussion of current events. A mother's dy program will be given at the next meeting, May 18. -- EXAMINER COMING A traveling examiner of oper ators and chauffeurs is scheduled to arrive in Heppner Tusday, May 15, 1945, and will be on duty at courthouse - between the hours of 10 a. m. and 4 p. m., according to recent announcement released from the secretary of state's office. Mrs. Willard Blake and daughter were house guests of Mrs. Paul Webb and son for a few days this week. Best uuality .lotting paper in !!x24 sheet for desk covers or cnt smaller to suit your needs. Gazette Times printerv. SE3 (3333? (H3 q to1 0 3ms By the World's Most INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTER Bfinqinq mighty messaqe of hop 1o (he million, Rapidly Expanding Religious Broadcast CT 7 iJt': B' W TJM. tff Cf JW Iff MS to i; Director, World Wide Bible School Aulkor (lit WerW. w;d. ,4 Jni e.bl Correspond Coirmt. IN 1 V E R Y SUNDAY Tune in at 8:30 Sunday morn, ing on KUJ, Walla Walla Fiee Bible Correspondence Course Plan . . 'Enroliees are mailed the first lesson and alter fill ing in test paper answers, mail it in for correction. The lesson is then mailed back to enrollee. Diploma on completion. No books to buy. Only teit book it the Bible. 200,000 ALREADY ENROLLED: Doctors, Soldiers, Sunday School Teachers, Shut Ins, Ministers, Businessmen, Farmers, etc. Check which course you desire and mail TODAY to the Voice of Prophecy, Box 55, L. A., CalK World Wide Bible Correspondence Course I 36 Lessons I Large type. Test paper requires little writing. The greatest Bible course ever offered. Junior Bible Correspondence Course 124 Lessons I HigMy illustrated. Ideal for individual or group study. Invaluable to juniors and young people ! Braille Bible Correspondence Course tor tie Blind Special Bible Courses also available in other languages. Spanish Q Portuguese German YOUR NAME STREET CITY ZONE STATE COMPLETE SERVICE CARS and TRUCKS Motor Tunc-up Auto Electric Distributors Magnetos. Starters Generators Voltage and Current Regulating Carburetors Fuel Pumps Water Pump Repair Cooling System Flushed Hydra-Matic Drive Transmission Lubricating Service Richfield Products Station Hours: 10 a. m. to 8 p. m. Phone 1 242 Richfield Service in Heppner 0 W HARVESTED TIMBER LAND GOES 8ac if Out harvested timber land . . . commonly called "cut-over" land ... Is a producing area. Actually it will probably grow more new wood in the ten years after cutting than in the ten years preceding the last harvest. This is true because removal of slow-growing mature trees gives young, fast-growing stock a chance to develop rapidly. Harvested timber land need not be idle, abandoned land. More often now it is an active, working forest com parable to a field after the corn is cut. .... but, crop cycles in trees do not just happen. We plan for careful logging, leaving of seed sources, and fire protection. KINZUA PINE MILLS COMPANY , i i) them