Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, December 04, 1947, Page 6, Image 6

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    Fruits, Vegetables, Fish, Etc.
One Item or Assorted Items
6-Heppner Gcrette Times, Heppner, Oregon, December 4, 1947
GIVE CANNED FOODS
(By the Case)
vnnnc
FOR AIUIHO
(Ask about mailing in U. S.)
Something You Enjoy Eating Is Better Than
Something You Can't Wear
SANTA CLAUS CHRISTMAS PACK
Fruit Cocktail, Pears, Corn, Peaches, Apricots, Aspara
gus, Minced Clams, Red Salmon, Stuffed Olives, Mara
chino Cherries, Mincemeat, Black Figs, Light Figs, and
Mixed Nuts.
All pocked neatly in a carton ready for delivery in person
or by mail.
Buy for cash and not only get top quality but enjoy sav
ings which you can add to your Christmas shopping bud
get. Always Top Quality at Fair Prices at the
Court Street Market
Sr n
25
K
ii
K
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
WOWS GIFT SUPS
She Needs 'Em This Christmas
its the IS etc Longer Lengths!
2.98
Lace Trimmed or Tailored
Fine Rayon Satins or Crepes
Sixes range from 32 to 44
Fabulously lovely slips at this modest
prioe! They're cut longer for wear un
der the new length fashions preci-sioa-sised
to fit smoothly. All with
adjustable shoulder straps bias and
straight-cut styles in tea rose or white.
Elaborate Self Borders on
CHENILLE ROBES
Wrap-around style with tie
belt. Copen, cherry, tearose,
turquoise, maize.
Sizes 12-20.
5.90
She will love a new
Rayon Jersey Print
HOUSECOAT
8.90 & 9.90
Smartly styled Button or
" talon fastener types.
l&S i
mm
59c
Smooth-Fitting Adonna
RAYON PANTIES
Brief and medium-length
pinlirt nn dc from two-bar
trieol knit rayon. (Tlii
meant thry won't run!)
All-around elantic waiitt.
TearoM ' ' 32-42.
Rm.U.S.I'm.01."
She'll Feel So Cherished in Clamorous
ROBE AND NIGHTIE SETS
tvery woman love the luxury
of matching robea and night
ie! Choose from two mighty
dreamy itylea in toft pastel
rayon crepe two dainty pat
tern. 34-40.
9.90
Oregon Eighth In
Rural Electrical
Power Service
Oregon is a national leader In
the field of rural electrification,
ranking eighth in percentage of
farms with electric service, ac
cording to survey results sent
the O.S.C. extension service by
the Rural Electrification admin
istration.
Only 4,899 Oregon farms, or
7.8 percent of all farms in the
state, do not have electric ser-
ice, the survey shows. The sur
vey lists Connecticut, with all
but 1.5 percent of its farms elec
trified, at top of the list in farm
electrification program, followed
bv Rhode Island, Massachusetts,
New Jersey, Washington, New
York, Idaho, and Oregon, in that
order.
The study which analyzes the
nation's rural electrification pro
gress up to June 30, 1947, shows
that 2l4 million farms or 39 per
cent of all farms in the United
States, were not electrified at
that time.
The report states that a min
imum of $241,248 in new REA
loans will be available to rural
electric groups in Oregon before
June 30, 1948. Congress has made
available $225,000,000 in loan
funds for national use during
this fiscal year, of which half
is allotted to the various states
in direct proportion to their
needs. The other half is avail
able on a flexible basis, with no
single state to get more than 10
percent of it.
The nation's aVerage of elec
trified farms has increased from
one out of ten in 1936 to six out
of ten today, the report states,
with more rural power lines be
ing built today than ever before.
REA borrowers constructed ap
proximately 72,000 miles of dis
tribution lines and connected
nearly 300,000 rural consumers
to their systems between July 1,
1946 and June 30, 1947, in addi
tion to new construction by pri
vate companies.
'The task remaining will be
more difficult than what has
been accomplished," said Claude
R. Wickard, REA administrator.
"For the most part, the areas
easy to electrify have been elec
trified."
o
(SHOPPING WEEKS LEFfl
IBM
Interim Committee '
Investigating Game
Situation in Meetings
Two meetings of a legislative
interim committee, headed by
Lew Wallace, to investigate the
game situation in the state will
be held tributary to Morrow
county on December 10. One will
be In Pendleton at 12 noon, and
the other in The Dalles at 8 p.m.l we have collected all the data
Other eastern Oregon meetings' possible, it Is our purpose to en
are slated at Klamath Falls' list the help of the most out-
News From Irrigon . .
MS John Knievim and wife
and daughter Cindy visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Hayes, on Thanksgiving. He is
in charge of communications at
the U. S. depot at Auburn, Wn.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hayes own
the part of the Walter Grider
place with the house on it.
Miss Clara Ellen Fraser of E.O.
C.E. at La Grande returned to
La Grande after spending the
vacation with her mother and
family here.
Supt. Solwald spent the
Thanksgiving vacation with his
family at Freewater.
The Sam Umiker family spent
the Thanksgiving holiday with
her brother, Frank Leicht, and
family of The Dalles. Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Metter and children of
Aurora also came up to The Dal
les for the week end. The Leichts
formerly owned the Sparks prop
erty here.
Early Day Letter . . .
Continued iron iuk Pm
mud springs are curious basins
about ten feet deep by ten to
twenty across, in which messes
of mud the consistency of hash
house mush goes shlush! slush!
slush! for 24 hours a day.
There are places where you ;
pass great seams in the ground,
out of which puff sulphorous j
smoke and steam, and as your
horse s feet sink through the up
per crust you feel as though you
might at any moment go clean
through to the Infernal regions.
The altitude is quite elevated
so much so that we actually fail-
ed in trying to cook a mess of
beans. The longer we boiled
them the harder they got. We
boiled them all night, and threw
them away the next morning,
and beans never seemed so good
as when we found we could not
cook them.
We have several times passed
old camps where inscriptions on
trees told us where there were
the spots where Gen Howard's
little army had camped in 1877
while on the trail of Chief Jo
seph's hostile Nez Perces. I be
lieve the boys in blue must have
been entirely out of bacon and
hardtack when marching thru
the Yellowstone Park, judging
from the following inscription
written in pencil on a tree from
which the outer bark had been
scraped with a trowel bayonet:
"Howard's army camped here
Sept. 4, '77. Chief Joseph and
Fisher s scouts three days ahead.
Surrounding scenery would be
darn fine if a fellow had any
grub in his stomach. Wormy
trout and scenery don't pull to
gether. God bless our camp
(and send in a supply train). A.
J. Fay, E Co., 21st Infantry."
Having now covered all the
brown paper in camp, I will quit
scribbling and roll up in my sad
dle blankets.
Yours in dirt,
S. E. Carmack.
Bend, Burns, Ontario, Baker and
LaGrande.
This committee for the study
and restoration of wildlife re
sources is "going to put forth
every effort now that we are giv
ing our time for this to be the
exception to the rule of inter
im committees never accom
plishing anything," said Wallace
in announcing the meetings.
"We are attempting to find out
what is wrong with the game
situation in Oregon, whether it
be over-hunting, lack of enforce
ment, too many predators, ille
gal hunting or what not. When
standing wildlife authority in
America, Ira Gabrlelson," Wal
lace added,
KOR RENT Trailer house par
tially furnished. $10 per month.
Can rent at your location. Max
Schulz, last house behind bank.
37p
mid
N:..u.i y vmiiitf nifii hi-lwn 17
34 who are l.x.kinK fur a Mler limn
averuK job ami are willing to prepare
thmiiM'lvea for raplil promotion. Men
selected run enter the hlKh paid l'lt
of Haillo-Kadur and electronic thru
Ihe new U. N. Army Career plan and
be paid minimum civilian equivalent of
$211.6(1 per month while learninK. In
quire today at your V. S. Army at Air
Force HccruitinK Slattern.
U. 8. POSTOrFICE, Pgndleton. Of.
SPECIAL SCHOOL MEETING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to
the legal voters of School Dis
trict No. 1 of Morrow County,
State of Oregon, that in accord
ance with Title III, Chapter 8,
Article 3, O.C.L.A., as amended,
a SPECIAL SCHOOL MEETING
of said School District will be
held at the City Hall on the 17th
day of December 1947, from 2:00
o'clock P.M. until 3:00 o'clock P.
M., for the following purpose:
To vote upon the question of
consolidation of the following
named School Districts, to-wit:
Heppner School District No. 1
of Morrow County, Oregon.
Eight Mile District No. 31 of
Morrow County, Oregon.
Dated this 3rd day of Decem
ber, 1917.
Morrow County District
Boundary Board,
By Judge A. E. Johnson,
Chairman.
Lucy E. Rodgers,
37-38 Secretary.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Wells for Thanksgiving
Tom
Learn Radio under the worlds finest
instructors. Courses also in radar, uow-
Were ' er shovel operators, bull dozer drivers.
Drt,, i if d it -taulo mechanics ana many otner trades.
anu in a. ocnme nuwe oi I Select the course which most appeals
Milton. The guests arrived in t0 you, then talk it over with your
time to attend part of the union SWoty
Thanksgiving service at the Me- 1 pay will start at the civilian equivalent
thodist church and remained in '',, rC'Tr rSTomotTin
Heppner until Saturday morning , with hiKhcr pav inquire at
visiting friends. i 8r POSTOFFICE, Pendleton. Ore.
WELL DRILLING
WATER GUARANTEED
SHUEY&CRUM
Wenatchee, Wash.
McClintock's Machine Shop
local representative
What the Seal doesn't show
Of all infectious germs, the tuberculosis
germ kills as many people as all others
combined. (!3 Yet, the tuberculosis death
rate has been cut 80 per cent since 1904.
Your Christmas Seal Sale money has helped
because it provides X-ray units, Jjj mass
examinations, laboratory re
search, patient rehabilitation expand
public education. So please, remember to
use Christmas Seals on all letters, cards and
1-fr? i
packages. w0r Send in your contribution
today to your Tuberculosis Association..
r
Buy Christmas Seals
; HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES
There Are Some People Who
Prefer Caviar to Sardines
Fri.-Sat.
LAST OF THE
REDMEN
based on James Feni
more Cooper's "Last of
the Mohicans' '
plus
Spoilers of the
North
Sun.-Mon.
The Farmer's
Daughter
You'll love her.
Wed.-Thurs.
The Fabulous
Dorseys
Good music, well
played and easy to
listen to.
STAR
THEATER
Certain books, certain plays, certain
movies (like caviar and cham
pagne) are made for certain people.
This message is for those who like
something distinctive
It's about a movie, a movie called
"Stairway to Heaven," a movie
which has received the year's high
est recommendations, and here is
our point
"Stairway to Heaven," filmed in new
Chromatic Technicolor, has every
thrill the screen can bring . . . rom
ance . . . adventure . . . comedy. . .
and features David Niven, Raymond
Massey and Kim Hunter and it is the
superb acting of these three that
make it worthy of attention.
"Stairway to Heaven" comes from
advanced-price showings in some of
the larger cities. Our prices will not
be advanced.
We may be wrong but we bel ieve you
will enjoy every moment of 'Stairway
to Heaven There may have been
prettier love stories, funnier com
edies, but never one quite so unus
ual. TUESDAY, December 9
L
belk
mil
44 Head Open Grain Fed
Heifers
2 Dozen New Hampshire Pullets
2 4H Club Lambs - Excellent
for Lockers.
Regular Run of Livestock
Bring in anything you want to sell
Terms : Cash
IHIejppneir Sales Yaird
JOHN VARNER HAROLD ERWIN HARRY DINGES
Auctioneer Operator Clerk