Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 16, 1947, Page 4, Image 4

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    4-Heppner Garette Times, Heppner, Oregon, October 16, 1947
State Opens New Trade And Technical Institution At Klamath Falls
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Formal openinj of the Oregon Vocational school, located on the site of the wartime Klamath Falls Marine Barracks, will be held on
October 19 and 29 with appropriate ceremonies. State officials, educators and many other visitors will be on hand for the two-day event,
which will be climaxed by a large banquet on the campus Monday night, October 20, combined with the annual meeting of the Klamath
County chamber of commerce. The large view above shows the big, ready-made campus of the school. At right is Winston Purvine, the
director. Other pictures illustrate phases of the trade and technical training program, including such courses as civil engineering aide, (in
cluding surveying), baking, combination welding, auto mechanics, dental technician, gunsmithing, commercial art, diesel, railroad and com
sacrciil telegraphy, and many other specialized training programs. Director Purvine Invited the public to visit and inspect the new school.
Interested prospective students may register at any time for any course in operation, and full course information is available by writing to
Oregon Vocational School. Klamath Falls. Ore.
Two Irrigon Girls
Hold Positions As
Registered Nurses
By Grace Shoun
Two Morrow county girls, Lois
Markham and Betty Acock are
now registered nurses. They took
their examinations in Spokane
in August and have their stand
ing showing their credits. They
started out as cadet nurses three
years ago last March. Miss Mark
ham is nursing in the Deaconess
hospital in Spokane and Miss
Acock in St Anthony's hospital
In Pendleton.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell McCoy
and children ot Kennewick spent
Sunday with his parents. Mr.
and Mrs. J. E. McCoy, and fam
ily.
Rev. A. B. Turner was a Walla
Walla visitor Monday.
i put up a cabin and moved his
family out there Monday. They
have been living in the James
Phillips house. The Phillips' are
going to do some remodeling on
their place.
The Missionary Circle met at
Ruth Uniker's Friday and work
ed on a quilt
Ray Cosner has purchased the
George Caldwell house and Is
moving into it from the Roy Mar
low house.
The teachers are having insti
tute at Baker so there was only
two days of school this week.
Most of the older boys have gone
hunting.
Mr. and Mrs. B.-P. Rand were
Walla Walla visitors Saturday.
They brought son David home
and took him back Sunday.
The Dan Hiebert family mov
ed to Cottage Grove. The mem
bers of the Adventist church gave
a stork and farewell party Sat
urday evening. There were about
35 people present from Board
man and Irrigon.
Sylvia Pelton, Norman Sim-
Jack Hinkley has purchased I rr.ons, Don Evans and Elmer Col-
the Bert Benefiel place and has'lins spent the week end with
their families from the Upper
Columbia academy at Spangle,
Wash.
The Irrigon football team play
ed Weston at Weston Friday.
The Weston team won, 18 to 14.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Dexter are
in New Mexico visiting their
daughter, Mrs. Bessie Hobbs, and
family. They are also going to
visit in California. They plan to
be gone at least six weeks.
The Irrigon football team
played Athena. Athena won 44
to 0. Most of the first string boys
were in the mountains hunting.
Jack Smith fractured his knee
very badly in the Athena foot
ball game. The game was Mon
day afternoon.
Harry Reeves of Vancouver,
Wash., has purchased the Cabin
City motel west of Irrigon from
John Allen. The Aliens are
building some more on another
plot of ground adjoining.
Mrs. Roy Mathena and son
Verl are in Provo, Utah, visiting
relatives.
William Gollyhorn and Bill
Graybeal went to the mountains
to hunt Monday.
for a LANE Cedar Hope Chest
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Increase Due In
Traffic Deaths
Next Few Weeks
Oregon traffic deaths are due
for a sharp rise during the re
maining months of the year,
Secretary of State Robert S. Far
rell Jr. has warned. Past records
point to an impending upsurge
from now through the year-end
holidays.
"We can all but bet on it," Far-
rell declared. "Each year the
record is the same. Drivers and
pedestrians are in more danger
now than at any other time
Early darkness, rainy weath
er, and traffic congestion in cit
ies were cited as chief reasons
for the expected death increase
These hazards continue to grow
as the season advances. Oregon's
worst death month was Novem
ber, 1936, when 58 lives were lost,
followed closely by December,
1946, with 56 fatalities.
Although 1947 losses are trail
ing last years record-breaking
Oregon Methodists
Will Welcome New
Bishop October 19
Oregon Conference Methodists
will gather at First Methodist
church, Portland, next Sunday
afternoon, October 19, at 4:30 o'
clock in a reception to honor
Bishop and Mrs. Francis J. Mc
Connell, new resident bishop of
the Portland area. Bishop Mc
Connell succeeds the late Bruce
R. Baxter, who died last June in
Portland during the sessions of
the Oregon annual conference.
The McConnells have recently
come to Portland from Ohio.
Prior to his retirement in 1944,
Bishop McConnell was the gen
eral superintendent of the New
York area of the Methodist
church.
A short program will be con
ducted in the sanctuary of the
First Methodist church and the
reception will follow In the
church parlors. Dr. Foy A. Fedje,
superintendent of the Salem dis
trict, will give the address of
welcome, which will be followed
by a response from Bishop Mc
Connell. Mrs. W. L. Lewis of Sa
lem, conference president of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service, will introduce Mrs. Mc
Connell. Music will be furnish
ed by the sanctuary quartet of
First Methodist church and by
William Robinson Boone, organ
ist and minister of music. Oth
ers on the program include Rev
erend Laurence E. Nye, host pas
tor; Dr.' Joseph M. Adams, sup
erintendent of the Portland dis
trict; Reverend Oliver J. Gill, su
perintendent of the Forest Grove
district, and Reverend S. Raynor
bmith of Roseburg, superintend
ent of the southern district. Dr.
Edward L. Clark, president of
Multnomah college and confer
ence lay leader, will preside.
Vets Enlisting In
Reserve Units To
Keep Benefit Status
Veterans who waive their right
to compensation or pension in
order to enroll in the National
Guard or Naval Reserve, or for
any other reason, do not lose
their rights to other federal ben
efits for them or their depend
ents, Charles M. Cox, Veterans
Administration representative in
this area, explained today.
These veterans also may re
apply for disability compensa
tion at any future time and ap
proved awards will be payable
again from the date of the new
application, he said.
Under this VA ruling, a dis
abled veteran who had waived
compensation in order to enlist
in the National Guard was
found entitled to vocational
training at government expense
and to the same subsistence al
lowances payable under the G.I.
bill.
By waiving compensation he
forfeited only his right to spe
cial allowances, payable to dis
abled veterans in training, for
the period of his enlistment, the
VA representative said.
o
Farrell Releases
Expiring Numbers
On Driver Licenses
Oregon drivers' licenses num
bered below 5R-132.000 are all
void, it has been announced by
Robert S. Farrell Jr., secretary of
state. He added that licenses
numbered between 5R-132.000
and 5R-165.000 expire this month.
All drivers' permits issued be
fore June 1947 bear the "5R" pre
fix, and expire in accordance
with a schedule available free
from service stations, police sta
tions, sheriffs' offices, and driv
ers' license clerks and examin
ers. No examination is necessary
for renewals of these.
"No individual motorist will
receive a mailed notice when his
license expires," Farrell said.
"He must apply of his own ac
cord at the right time. The sched
ule will tell him exactly when."
Many drivers have already
paid fines in addition to the cost
of a new license when appre
hended by the police. Road
checks of licenses are being continued.
'There is no point in delaying
your application, a license
spokesman said, "since your new
license will expire at the same
time, regardless of whether tak
en out on the proper date."
without killing many game fish.
At Lake of the Woods a trap
was built for removal of trash
fish.
Careless anglers throwing live
bait into the lakes have been
responsible for the introduction
of the roach, which, if left un
controlled, could ruin the lakes
entirely for trout fishing as hap
pened with South Twin lake
some years ago. Present regula
tions make it unlawful to use
live minnows or bait for trout
fishing.
We have mufflers to fit 90 of
all makes of cars. Rosewall
' Motor Company.
Sim niumtm
Rom where I sit ... Joe Marsh
Mystery of
the Missing Farms
CASCADE LAKES CLEARED
OF TRASH FISH TO IMPROVE
ANGLING FOR TROUT
Trash fish control crews of the
game commission working in the
Cascade lakes this summer re
moved more than 15,000,000
rough fish in the program to im
prove trout fishing in those wa
ters.
Operations were concentrated
at some of the better known
lakes. In Diamond lake, 5,000,
000 roach were killed; East lake,
1,000,000 or 7 12 tons; Crescent,
Odell and Davis lakes, 8,200,000;
Lake of the Woods and Fish lake,
2 tons of perch and roach; and
some control work was done also
at Paulina and Big Lava lakes.
Chief methods of removal
were seining along the shoreline
when the roach gathered to
spawn or poisoning with rote
none when this could be done
Yep, the number of farms in
America is shrinking (by s quarter
million in the last five years!).
What's happened to the missing
farms? The land has been taken
in by other farms, increasing; the
average size by twenty acres!
Does this growth mean farm
ing's no longer family enter
prise? Just the opposite! More
families own farms today than
ever only with labor-saving
equipment they can handle more
land, more work.
That's as it should be. The family
farm is a fortress of democracy
where our free, American life Is
secure. Where every member co
operates and shares the work . . .
living together in temperance and
tolerance temperance that pre
fers a moderate beverage like beer,
and tolerance for a taste that may
be different from one's own.
From where I sit, our Family
Farms (and they're 96 of oil
furms) are something that this
country can be proud of!
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Mulkey and, fatality list, unprecedented traf-
brother Gene got back from thejfic volumes can reverse the sit-
mountains Sunday. Gene got a
buck.
Jack White spent Sunday in
Stanfield with his mother, Mrs.
Margaret White, and sister Lor
etta. Jerry White of Richland was
an Irrigon visitor Sunday.
Mrs. Eunice Allen of Eugene
is visiting her son, John Allen,
and family.
uation almost overnight, safety
men point out. With exposure
to accidents heightened by step
ped-up car travel, officials fear
the casualty toll will reach new
height.
"Only a sharpened awareness
of individual danger on the part
of each driver and each pedes
trian can prevent this," Farrell
said.
hi
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DAYID 0. SELZNICK
xAooounctt tit
presentation
..M TECHNICOLOR production
CHINESE HAPPINESS RECIPE
If you wish to be happy for an
hour, get intoxicated.
If you wish to be happy for
three days, get married.
If you wish to be happy for
eight days, kill your pig and eat
it.
If you wish to be happy for
ever, become a gardener.
Bring Your
PHOTOS
Pictures and
Standard Oil Prints
to me for framing.
I have a complete
modern line of fine
framing materials.
O. M. YEAGER'S
SERVICE STORE
Phone 2752 or 1483
Across from Tum-A-Lum
Lumber Company
Heppner, Oregon
........ jT
m
SMfCOHUSl
t ROUND -the -WORLD TRIP!
(or $5000.00)
t VACATION in RIO!
(or $2900.00)
k HOLIDAY in HAWAII!
' (or $1000.00)
PAN AMERICAN CUPPERS...
All exp.ni.i paid for fwo per.eml
r 635 other
WTHRILLING PRIZES
10 FOURTH PRIZES, Bendix Aufomalic Home laundries
2S FIFTH PRIZES, Cora Nome Filled Trove Cojei
100 SIXTH PRIZES, Regent Cigarette Lighter,
500 SEVENTH PRIZES, One Pair Each SpunTen Nyom
Art! finish this i.nl.nc. in SO additional words or Uin
"I prefer Rexall Products
because
Obtain conl.il tul.i and official .ntry blank at your D.sall Drug
Stor. during th. R.xall Original lc Sol.-Octob.r 15, It, 7, It.
Humphreys Drug Co.
BORE HOLES IN BILL BOARDS
Bill owned a bill board. Bill
also owed a board bill. The
board bill bored Bill; so Bill sold
his bill board to pay his board
bill. After Bill sold his bill board
to pay his board bill the board
bill no longer bored Bill.
iTAI.INO
Yfy JENNIFER JONES . GREGORY PECK JOSEPH COHEN
V? LIONEL BARRYMORE
V" ' HERBERT MARSHALL . LILLIAN GISH l
VL .
1W
WITH A CAST OF 2500
DirKttd
KING VIDOR
9
1
' f 'mi
STAR THEATER
Wednesday and Thursday, October
29th and 30th
ADMISSION PRICES
Adult. $1.20
Children under 12 ,55
Taxes included
Program .tart, at 8 p.m. One showing each evening.
BEDTIME STORY
Mama Bear: "Somebody's been
drinking my whiskey!"
Papa Bear: "Somebody's been
drinking my gin!"
Baby Bear: "Hie!"
Transferring &
Heavy Hauling
Padded Moving
Vans
Storage
Warehouse
U. P. and N. P.
Penland Bros.
Transfer Co.
39 SW Dorion Avenue
Phone 338
Pendleton, Ore.
Condon Fire Department
PRESENTS ITS 6TH ANNUAL
FMEMEN'S BALL
a
AT THE HIGH SCHOOL GYM
Saturday, October 25
MUSIC BY
Farrow's Orchestra
ADMISSION: MEN $1.50-Tax included; LADIES 50c
s
1 1.
Heppner
PHOTO STUDIO
Come in and get
acquainted.
Now is the time to
have those pictures
taken for Xmas.
No appointment
necessary.
LOUIS LYONS
Phone 2772 May & Chase
Free Plan Service
Let us Plan Your
NEW HOME
We Like To Help Folks Build!
Tum-A-Lum Lumber Company
Frank Davis, Manager
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