2-Hcppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon, Aug. 7, 7947 EDITORIAL Too Bod to Pass This Up Ilfppni r has p.n opportunity to add a course In dminp .it the nich school and thorp scorns to be no one aaili to take necessary training to qualify as instructor. According ti information received here, it is required that a member of the whool teaching staff qualify for the Job. This requires a two weeks training in an American Automobile Association school, one of which is maintained in Portland. The matter of a training car will be taken care of, we are informed. A dual control car will be placed at the disposal of the school if an accred ited instructor is obtained. The point seems to be that while school officials would like to include the course there is no one available in the faculty to take the training for instructor. Male members are employed during the summer and will be up until shortly before school opens and unless one of them develops an urge to become a driving instructor, an urge strong enough to compel him to surrender a re munerative job for two weeks of special training, it is not likely that the course will be accepted, this year, at least. There is no objection to teachers accepting em ployment during the summer but it seems that in view of the current salary schedules, which are paid on a twelve month basis, some of the vaca tion period should be devoted to school interests. Water Project Being Realized Main and Chase steerts are all torn up this week, bringing to realization a project that has been under consideration for several years re laying of w ater mains and a general revamping of the city's water system. At the rate of speed the job has been going since Monday it is likely that the switch from the old pipelines to the new wiii be accomplished in a matter of two weeks at the most. Aside from a few breaks in the old line Wed nesday afternoon, necessitating the shutting off of the water for several hours, there has been lit tle inconvenience due to the work, and lack of water for a short period is a small price to pay for assurance of better fire protection and gen eral use in the future. Forms for the concrete lining of the new reser voir are being placed and it should not be many weeks until the improved system will be in use. Rooms Will Be Needed Rodeo time is approaching and with it comes the demand for extra rooms. There will be many visitors in town who will want to spend one or more days attending the show. Public rooming facilities are limited and if these visitors are to be accommodated it will fall upon households to do it, 'Ihe housing committee is urging those who have rooms to spare to list them now and not make It necessary for the committee to make a house to house canvass. The listing is being done at the Turner, Van Marter & Company of fice, which is Just a step from the post office. You will not be out anything if your rooms are not used and you will be making a valuable contribution to the Rodeo, which is a community effort, if you offer this assistance. What About the Parade? There Is good reason to believe that the 1947 Heppner Rodeo will exhibit more saddle stock than has been in evidence at previous shows. This is based on the assumption that several of the numerous saddle clubs in thearea will be here for the Saturday show and parade. Addition of a riding club to the community life of Morrow county within the year will add color to the par ade and the exhibition at the show grounds. With the assurance of plenty of fine saddle stock it is time to consider other phases of the parade. What are the business houses and var ious organizations planning to do? There is a double reason for making this year's parade out standing. Not only is the Rodeo concerned but there will be a county fair running concurrently with it and that should cause a renewed interest in the display of the county's resources. Time is growing short but there is enough of it left to do a good job of preparing floats. The parade is one of the big features of the Rodeo. It draws many people to town who might not otherwise come. It is to the interest of business houses, in particular, to extend themselves a lit tle to make the parade an outstanding event of the annual show. Elliott Roosevelt says the present investigation is an attempt to smear the late president for campaign purposes. That is the cry set up every time the're is any questioning about new deal practices. If the cry is persisted in much longer a hoodwinked public is liable to get the idea that there is a skeleton in the closet. Heppner needs a civic building not only to provide a recreation center for the young people but to make some provision for public functions. The Chamber of Commerce has been reticent to take hold of the proposal as started by the Jun ior Chamber of Commerce, yet the senior group is sorely handicapped for a meeting place for anything larger than the regular weekly lunch eon meetings. Only this week the committee in charge of planning a dinner meeting in honor of the Rodeo queen and her court, in which delega tions from neighboring towns were to be invited, had to abandon the plan because there was no place to hold such an affair. The Jaycees are prepared to go ahead with plans for a modified civic center, one that will not duplicate" the pro jected county fair pavilion but at the same time make ample provision for just such functions as the one referred to. This is something in which the entire community is concerned and the Chamber of Commerce should put its shoulder to the wheel and start pushing in earnest. 30 YEARS Am From Heppner Gazette Times Aug. 9, 1917 C. A. Minor of this city has bought the first tickets for the 1917 Pendleton Round-Up. Mrs. Gay M. Anderson and children will leave Saturday for ! Goldendale, Wash., where they 5 will visit at the home of Mrs. Anderson s parents. In Morrow county 82 men have been called up for examination as the first step towards becom ing full fledged soldiers in Un cle Sam's army. Dr. H. T. Allison left Friday for Douglass, Wyo., as a commis sioned officer in the U. S. army medical corps. Dr. Winnard will look after his practice in his ab sence. O. E. Farnsworth returned Saturday from a business trip into Baker and Union counties. Miss Marcia Winnard has re turned from Monmouth where she has been attending the summer session of the state nor mal school. Mr. and Mrs. John Brosnan were visitors at the Hugh Cur rin ranch on Birch creek the latter part of the week. Lewis Kopple, who has been running the local store during the absence of his brother, M. H. Kopple, in the east, was one of those drawn in the selective traft in Gilliam county.- His home is in Condon. Frank and Howard Anderson, Eight Mile farmers, were in the city Saturday making prepara tions to begin harvest. Burl Gurdane and Ray Rogers left last Friday for' Lehman Springs for a two weeks holiday. The Sound Amusement com pany will arrive in Heppner next Monday to open up for a five-day engagement at the fair grounds. One of the main fea tures of the carnival will be held Saturday afternoon, the balloon ascension and parachute jump. Ralph I. Thompson of Portland is spending a few days in Hepp ner on business. Mrs. Lena Snell Shurte, coun ty school superintendent, re turned Wednesday evening from Portland where she had been on business. Miss Evelyn Shipley departed Sunday for Portland and the coast on a vacation of two weeks. She will attend buyers week in Portland while away. I IONE CHURCH SPONSORS I BIBLE HOUR OVER RADIO STATION KWRC Rev. Frank Nichols, pastor of the lone Baptist church, Informs this newspaper that his church is sponsoring a broadcast over station KWRC, Pendleton, dur ing the month of August. A program to be known as the "Bible Hour" will be broadcast from 7:15 to 7:30 each Tuesday evening during the month. GOVERNOR RETURNS Governor Earl Snell returned Monday .to the capital after at tending a governor's conference in Salt Lake City and partici pating in an inspection trip to- Hawaii with ten other state ex ecutives, as guests of the navy. The trip was made on the Iowa, one of our four largest battle ships, on which 18 Oregon stu dents are in training along with trainees of other western states. In returning stateside the gov ernors traveled on the 4-motored plane Mars which made the trip from Hawaii to San Francisco in 29 hours. WANT TO GO FISHIN' If you do not know where Mi nam lake is located you are not the only one. The state game commission, state department of travel and information and many other state departments have answered hundreds of in quiries this week as to the loca tion of this Oregon lake. It all started when a newspaper par agraph printed last week report ed Justice William O. Douglas Have You a Birthday Gift Coming Up? Are you puzzled about what to give? May we suggest that you select a nice box of stationery and have the recipient's name and address printed on letterheads and envelopes? pEXonallzzcL tatLonz,j is appropriate any tjme and makes an acceptable gift for special occasions. You will find a nice assortment of BOXED STATIONERY at the Gazette Times office. There are nice type faces to make the job look just right, what with the printer's knowledge of making paper, type and ink work together, combining all to make a beautiful gift. Drop in any time and make your selection GAZETTE TIMES PRINTERY of the U. S. supreme court as saying that the big ones should be biting on the Minam when the trout flies start coming out. Not every day can you get a decision by a member of the United States supreme court as to where to go fishing and just in case Minam lake Is south' of Enterprise in Wallowa county NO LIQOUR LOSS The Oregon state liquor con trol commission will not lose money for the state by the 8000 barrel liquor deal although they were facing a loss for several months. The atom bomb did it. Conditions just before the end of the war that faced the com mission demanded that the state supply of liquor be kept flowing and profits made to meet the old age assistance program. The whole liquor market was bull ish. The commission made a good deal and had the stock it needed for a big wartime trade. Then came the bomb. The commission was caught heavy with stock. During the legislature the commission pro phesied sales might drop sharp ly. Others guessed they would increase. Both were right. Both were wrong. Sales dropped slightly but not enough to lose money over the biennium. During the legislative session of 1945 just thirty months ago the state board of control was estimating the cost of construct ing a new 114-bed treatment hospital at the Eastern Oregon state hospital at Pendleton. State employed architects said the cost would be around $550,000. A revised estimate at the time the call for bids was made June 10 this year was $700,000. When bids were opened this week the McCormack Construc tion company of Pendleton had the lowest bid at $946,489. There were only two other bidders. There was only about 2 per cent difference in the three. TOLL ROAD STUDY Oregon's J. M. Devers, attor ney for the state highway com mission, has Just been appoint ed by the American Association of State Highway Officials to serve on a committee to study toll road construction and oper ation. Devers says the purpose of the EXAMINER COMING Next visit of the drivers li cense examiner to Heppner will be Tuesday, August 12. He will be at the courthouse between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Per sons wishing licenses or permits to drive are asked to get in touch with the examiner well ahead of the scheduled closing hour in order to assure comple tion of their applications with a minimum of delay. CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our deep appreciation for the many ten ders of sympathy and for the beautiful floral tributes to the memory of our mother. The children of Martha Wright. o CARD OF THANKS We take this opportunity to thank our friends for the ex pressions of sympathy and for the beautiful floral offerings to the memory of the late Allen Wright Saling. The Saling Family. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lundell of Oakland, Cal., have been vis iting at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Lundell, in Gooseberry. They are en route to Baurette, Minn., to visit Mrs. Lundell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Curtis. committee is to develop a policy on toll roads, which now are be ing built in several states. If the committee recommends toll roads, then it will advise uni form legislation on the subject. The federal government does not provide financial aid for construction of toll roads. CAPITAL SHORTS Twenty-two ground units and six air units of the Oregon Na tional Guard have been activat ed to date Three state liquor control commission stores in Portland now are kept open un til midnight The new 1948 auto license plates are red let ters on an aluminum back ground. The first shipment of 50,000 plates has just arrived Claims of G.I. veterans for June were the highest since last Feb ruary. Oregon's collegiate veter ans are actively in the labor market. ...Ralph D Moores will manage the campaign for dele gates to the republican conven tion in behalf of Governor Tom Dewey. ... "There are too many beekeepers in Oregon," says the state agricultural department, "that will result in a low honey yield per bee colony.". . .The The counties share of highway With an Ironrite you can iron everything See Ironite demonstrated at The Flower Shop Friday & Saturday 2 to 4 p. m. L. E. DICK Heppner Your Ironite Dealer SPINET PIANOS Three of America's Outstanding Pianos . . . Now Ready for Immediate DELIVERY Baldwin Acrosonic Wurlitzer Betsy Ross FREE DELIVERY and EASY TERMS of PAYMENT Liberal allowance for your old piano. PENDLETON MUSIC HOUSE J. O. PETERSON Latest Jewelry and Gift Goods Watches, Clocks, Diamonds Expert Watch & Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTORNEY AT LAW PeUrs Building. Willow Street Heppner. Oregon Veterans of Foreign J. O. TURNER Anrc ATTORNEY AT LAW VarS Phoae 173 Meetings 2nd and 4th Mondays at Hotel Heppner Building 8:00 p. m. in Legion Hall Heppner. Oreaoa O. M. YEAGER CONTRACTOR & BUILDER au Kinds of carpenter work. Modern Homes Built or Remodeled Phone 1483 415 Janes St. HEPPNER. OREGON Turner, Van Marter and Company GENERAL INSURANCE P. W. MAHONEY Attorney at Law GENERAL INSURANCE Heppner Hotel Building Willow Street Entrance ' OK Rubber Welders FRANK ENGKRAF, Prop. First class work guaranteed Located in the Kane Building North Main St. Heppner, Ore. Phelps Funeral Home Jack A. Woodhall Doctor oi Dental Medicine Office First Floor Bank Bldg. Phone 2342 Heppner Licensed Funeral Directors Phone 1932 Hepaner. Ore. Heppner City Council Meets First Monday Each Month Citizens having Butters for discus sion, please bring before the Council Morrow County Abstract & Title Co. INC. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE TITLE INSURANCE Office in Peters Building Merchants Credit Bureau Accurate Credit Information F. B. Nickerson Phone 12 Heppner Morrow County Cleaners Box 82, Heppner, Ore. Phone 2632 Superior Dry Cleaning & Finishing Dr. L. D. Tibbies OSTEOPATHIC Physician & Surgeon First National Bank Building Res. Ph. 1182 Office Ph. 4M A. D. McMurdo, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Trained Nurse Assistant Office in Masonic Building Heppner. Oregon Dr. C. C. Dunham CHIROPRACTIC PHYSICIAN Cilice up stairs L O. O. F. Bids Hous! calls made House Phone 2583 Office 2572 Blaine E. Isom All Kinds of INSURANCE Phone 723 Heppner, On N. D. BAILEY Cabinet Shop Lawn Mowers Sharpened Sewing Machines Repaired Phone 1485 for apointment, or call at shop. Heppner, Oregon Heppner Hospital Beds available by reservation. W. P. BROWNE, M.D. Physician & Surgeon 5 K Street Phone 952 GENERAL ROOFING Colors to suit your home . . . Gilsonite your old roofs. Free Estimates Call 1282 revenues last year was $3,000, 000. This year it will exceed $5,000,000.... The state tax com mission has mailed blanks to all logging operators in Oregon for making returns on the new 5-cents-1000-board feet fax on all timber harvested in the state. GRAIN BUYING ARCHER-DANIELS MIDLAND CO. Clifford Carlson, Mgr. Heppner Office 1st National Bank Bldg., Phone 2623 Office Hours, 1-6 P. M. lone Office Phone 1111 istr It is with pleasure that I announce to the women of Morrow county that I'have secured the services of Hazel Green, who is a licensed beauty operator with years of experience. Mrs. Green will be glad to take evening appoint ments. Our air-conditioned shop offers comfort and relaxation while drying your hair. Open six days a week. Lois's Beauty Shop