o k e a o :: historical society PUBLIC AUDITORIUM PORTLAND. 0 if Gazette Times Volume 65, Number 20 Heppner, Oregon, Thursday, Aug. 5, 1948 C.B.E. Cooperative, tone's Apartment House Fossil Clubbers Council Votes To Hammer Out 8 To Purchase Garbage Modern Hardware Store Sum For Lines 5 Victory Sunday Hfppmf.ir WWW ' ? Construction Set To Start Locally In About 2 Weeks Early construction of 412 miles of rural distribution lines thru out Morrow and Gilliam counties was assured with the receipt Monday of approval by the Rur al Electrification administration of an appllcaton of the Columbia Basin Electric Cooperative, Inc., for an additional allotment of $150,000. The REA also approved the CBE's proposal to do the work by force account. Request for additional funds was made after bids from con tractors on two different occa sions were found to be in excess of estimated construction costs. Following the second call for bids, the board of directors and Manager A. A. Scouten decided to go ahead with the construction by force account, providing addi tional funds were granted and the work met the approval of the " REA. Manager Scouten announced Tuesday that It may be possible to start construction within two weeks, although it is not expect ed that equipment will be avail able for general work inside of 30 days. Local work will begin at the Glavey ranch and a line will be run from there to connect with the high line at Jordan Sid ing. On the Gilliam county side work will start at Lone Rock and extend to Thirty-mile creek. As materials and equipment arrive the work will be extended thru out both counties until the 412 miles of service line are complet ed. Three trucks have been acquir ed and a fourth one equipped with a hole digger will be deliv ered here In a month or so, Scout en said. The manager plans to circular ize the rural home owners ask ing them to have their wiring in stalled so that hookups may be made without delay when the distribution, lines are ready to carry the current. Joseph E. Supple Dies In Portland An Item in The Morning Ore gonian of Wednesday told of the death In Portland Tuesday of Jo. seph E. Supple, 53. Chapel ser vices were being held at 1 o'clock p.m. today at the Lincoln Mem orial Park. Mr. Supple was the husband of a former Heppner girl, Mary Cur rln. who with a son, John J. Sup ple, a daughter, .Mrs. Jo Ann Mansfield, and granddaughter, Merrily Mansfield of Newport Beach, Cal., survive County Agent News . . Approval by the state board of higher education for a program of purchase of livestock for use in teaching and research at Ore gon State college, virtually com pletes the "six-year" program for animal husbandry recommended by a group of livestock men who studied the situation 10 years ago, reports P. M. Brandt, head of the animal husbandry division at the college. Appropriation of $12,641 for purchases of high quality beef cattle, sheep and swine of repre sentative breeds follows provis ion for adequate housing for the college herds and the earlier ac quisition of additional land near Corvallis for research and main tenance purposes, he said. With the completion of farm buildings now under construction and the purchase of new stock, Oregon State will be in position to give Just as complete and high quality instruction as that offer ed anywhere in the country In animal husbandry, Professor Brandt emphasized. While the herds will not ap proximate In size those maintain ed by some of the wealthier states, Ihey will meet all practic al requirements of both teaching and research, he said. Most of the money will be used to expand the beef cattle and sheep numbers under a plan whereby replacements may be bred at the college, thus main taining adequate herds at min imum cost. Swine herds are al ready adequate for teaching but some additions will be made for research work. A new beef barn of largely fire proof construction and separate from hay storage buldings has been started to replace the one destroyed by fire about a year ago. It and related buildings will be located on an extension of the street running past the former beef barn and horse barn but far ther west across 35th street which forms the western city limits of Corvallis. o The Royal Canadian Mounted Tollce drill team will make Its first appearance In the Untied Slates since World War II when It appears at the Pacific Inter national Livestock exposition Oc tober 1 to 1 In Portland. F ft. V K J' Hi, In years gone by this building was known as the Park Hotel and provided comfort for the traveling public. A few years ago it was purchased by Verner Troedson and made over into an apartment house. The Park has provided housing for families at a time when private home facilities are lacking and there is always a waiting list for any vacancies that may occur. Heppner Photo Studio. Week's News In Brief Gathered From Town and Surrounding Neihborhood Heppner relatives have receiv ed word of the birth of a seven pound two ounce son to Mr. and Mrs. Billy Schwarz, Sunday, Aug ust 1, at The Dalles. The new arrival has been named John. He is the third son, the other boys being named William and James, respectively. Paul McCarty and Florence Becket of Portland were week end guests at the home of Miss Becket's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Becket, in Eight Mile. O. M. Veager, who has been confined at home the past 10 days or so, is feeling improved. While not able to leave the house, he is able to visit and would ap preciate calls from his friends. Mrs. Fred Mankin went to Portland today to attend the wed ding of her niece, Patricia Gab bert, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Holmes Gabbert of Portland. The groom-to-be Is Robert Myers and the ceremony vill be performed at 4:30 p.m. Saturday at the Westminster Presbyterian church. Guests of Dr. and Mrs. A. D. McMurdo in Heppner Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. David Baum of La Grande, the Misses Florence and Marjorie Sims of Pendleton, and David Allison of Corvallis. The ladies of the Methdolst church announce a food sale starting at 10 o'clock a.m. Fri day, August 13, at the office of the Pacific Power & Light com pany. Leslie Matlock is back in Ilepp. ner after being hospitalized in Portland for several weeks. He returned Saturday and reports that he is feeling better. Week-end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Parrish were Donna Jean Robitsch, Sauvies Is land, Portland, Bon and Mike Hamlen, Condon, and Billy Jean Huddleston of Lonerock. Lowell Rippee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Rippee, former Hepp ner residents, left Wednesday for Portland to take his physical ex amination for entrance in the U. S. Army air force. Mrs. Harvey Bauman and chil dren, Carolyn and Jimmy, are guests at the Victor Johnson home while on a visit to Heppner. They came here from Lake Che lan, Wash., where they visited Mrs. Bauman's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cool. The Baumans make their home in Nampa, Ida. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Eberhart of Plant City, FIa left early this week for points in Idaho after visiting two weeks here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Eber hart Sr. This was their first trip west and they were highly pleas ed with the friendly atmosphere of western people. They also had their first taste of mountain trout while here. In Idaho they will visit Mr. and Mrs. Dave Eberhart at MeCall and Mrs. Gene Quinn at Pinehurst. Mr. ami Mrs. Tom Wilson have as their guest for the summer Mr. Wilson's sister, Jnhunne Wil son from Hopewell, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sandstrom have returned to their home In Vancouver, Wash., after a visit at the home of Mrs. Sandslrom's bro ther, E. R. Settle. Mrs. C. S. Wheeler and Mrs. B. F. Swaggart were Heppner vis itors Wednesday while looking after business matters. Mrs. Swaggart makes her home with Mrs. Wheeler in Pendleton but spends as much time at the big ranch at Swaggart buttes as she can. Miss Kalherine Monahan, Urn at i 1 la counly home demonstra tion agent, is spending her vaca tion in Heppner with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Monahan. - Mrs. Marvin Wightman Is con valescing at the homo of her sis ter in Portland following n siege in the Physicians & Surgeons hos pital In where she recently un derwent a surgical operation. She will remain In the clly until the Inst of August. Visitors at the N. D. Bailey home the past week were Mrs. Bailey's twin sister, Mrs. Maggie Reynolds, and Iwo son of New berg. The hoys, Tom and Dick, came in search of harvest work, expecting to remain for the summer. ml " i i ,:f LM Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Anderson several hours Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Marks and children of Fossil. Mr. Marks Is agricultural agent in Wheeler county and was returning from Wallowa county where he attend ed the regional range tour con ducted at the Hat Point and Cov erdale stations. Ross Findley of Beaverton was a visitor in Heppner Monday af ternoon. He is-compiling a his tory of the Findley family, early Oregon pioneers, and came here with the hope of finding a diary compiled by John Knox Dunlap, grandfather of Mrs. F. S. Parker and O. G. Crawford. Mr. Dunlap was a member of the Oregon ex pedition of 1816 and compiled much valuable historic matter of that day. The diary can not be located. Mr. Findley is a native of the Imnaha section of Wallowa county but has resided in Beaver ton for many years. The Earl -Blake family drove to Portland Saturday to spend a week. Miss Patricia Lawrence, daugh ter of Mrs. Richard Lawrence of Pendleton, has been a guest of Rita Dell Johnson in Heppner the past week. Mrs. J. O. Turner, Mrs. Ethel Adams and daughters, Betty and Nancy, left Tuesday afternoon for Klamath Falls where they were to be met by Mr. and Mrs. John Roscoe of Reno, Nev. Nancy Adams is going to Reno to visit several weeks at the Roscoe home. Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Adams and Betty expected to make a leisurely return trip, stopping at Crater Lake and other points of interest, returning home Friday. Mr. and Mrs. William Buck num are enjoying a vacation trip to Los Angeles, having left last week. They planned to spend a day or two at Reno en route and then go on to Los Angeles to visit Mr. Bucknum's brothers, Elmer and Gordon. They will return home this week end. Mrs. J. W. Carmichael of Cor vallis is visiting at the home of her father, E. W, Moyer. She is the youngest of the Moyer daugh ters and will be remembered as Miriam. Mr. and Mrs. James Barratt re turned Tuesday evening from Corvallis and Portland. They took Mrs. Cyrene Barratt to Corvallis after a visit in Heppner and re turning brought a new car from Portland. Accompanying them as far as Salem was Jack Minor, former- employee of the First Na tional bank here, who has just completed a course in veterinary science at the University of Col orado at Fort Collins. Mrs. Cella Bennett of Portland is a guest at the home of her sister, Mrs. Tress McClintock. Dr. Jean Palmer and family are enjoying a visit from his bro ther, Russell Palmer, of Vancou ver, Wash. Mr. Palmer, who is spending a week here, is a stu dent at Yale university where he is working on his master's de gree. Michael Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner of Portland, is vsiting his grandfather, Frank W. Turner. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Quackcn bush had as their guests the past week Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Quack, enbush and daughter Ethel from ,Montreal, Can., and Mr. and Mrs. William Palmer and grandson of Portland. Mr. nad Mrs. Frank S. Parker are driving to Hood River Friday to attend the music festival. Mrs. Parker expects to be the family representative at the festival while her husband thinks maybe he will perform the role of hiihv sitter at the Vawler Parker home. mr. and Mrs. Boyd Gullck and daughter Marguerite have re turned to their home in Seattle after a two weeks' vacation spent at the home of Mrs. Gullck's sis ter, Mrs. Alva Casebeer. Mr. and Mrs. Alva Casebeer returned Saturday from Sweet Home and Roseburg where they went to lake thler mothers, Mrs. Isabel Casebeer and Mrs. Janie Ilolcomb, to their respective homs after visiting at the Case beer home during July, Townies Drop All Chances For 1948 League Leadership By Jm Barratt The Heppner Townies baseball club dropped all chances for a league victory last Sunday as It was clubbed to a 8 to 5 submis sion by the visiting Fossil nine in a fray played at the Rodeo grounds. This Sunday the locals close regular season play here against the Kinzua nine with a victory meaning a league second spot, providing Condon loses Its final game. Fossil's offensive was as hot as a two-dollar pistol Sunday as it bunched seven hits and seven runs the initial two innings off the offerings of Heppner hurler Harlan McCurdy. From that point on the locals matched run-for-run with the visitors but the mar gin proved too great to overcome. Breaks went against the locals in their game bid for the game supremacy. Examples: In the eighth outfelder Ray Massey socked out a home run, but alas! No runners on bases ahead of him. And again in the final frame Heppner had two men on the bags with the tying run at the ! quisition of a truck and arrang plate, but Fossil retired the side ine for a man to onerate it to cop the victory. Poling out two hits apiece for Heppner were Norm Bergstrom, Ray Massey and Jimmie Boland while Miller, Bird and Schomp fattened their batting averages for Fossil with three hits each in the fray. Summary: Heppner 010 110 0115 Fossil 3 40 000 001-S Umpires: Carmichael and Hoo ver. Queen Betty And Royal Court To Be Guests At Dinner Folowing the usual procedure and giving further evidence that the 1948 Rodeo season is on the board of directors of the Heppner Rodeo association will play host to Queen Betty and her royal court at a 2 o'clock dinner to be served Sunday at the Elkhorn restaurant. Included in the party will be the members of the fair board and the Rodeo chaperones. The princesses are Vesta Cuts forth, Lorraine Swaggart, Lillian Hubbard and Constance Ruggles. Chaperones are Mrs. Raymond Ferguson and Mrs. Jack Loyd. The first princess dance was held Saturday evening at the Wil lows grange hall in loner Prin cess Lillian was the honoree and the hall was packed to do her honor. Next scheduled dance is this Saturday when the Civic Center in Heppner will be the scene of the dance to do homage to Princess Lorraine. PEA CROP AT RICE PLACE HARVESTED When spring weather condi tions made wheat seeding im practical at his ranch, Edward Kice decided to put the land to something that would mature early and he sowed it to peas. During the past weeks trucks from Pendleton hauled the fresh ly threshed peas to a cannery. For proper canning state the peas must be n the cannery within four to six hours from the time they pass through the separator, and the trucks were right on the job to see that there was no delay. o Mrs. Clive Huston left Sunday for Cove where she is assisting with the cooking at the Church of Christ summer camp. She Was Honor Guest . ? 'Hi . i'jr HI Inaugurating the prncess dances of the 1948 Rodeo season. Willows Grange hall of tone was opened to the public Saturday evening, July 31, in honor of Princess Lillian. In real life, the princess is Lillian Hubbard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Van Hubbard who operate the Charles Andtnon ranch In the lower Gooseberry area. ! Business Houses, v Residences To Be Served by City Decision to purchase a truck and proceed with the proposed garbage hauling project was reached Monday evening by the city council. The decision was reached after Councilman Tibbies made a report on the results of a questionnaire submitted to the householders several weeks ago and it was found that a suffi cient number desired the service to warrant purchase of a truck and employment of a driver. Rates for various groups will be worked out and collections will be made by attaching the haul ing bill to the regular water statement each month. What the council has in mind is to estab lish a regular service with the hope that better results will be obtained In handling the gar bage, not only in picking it up and hauling it to the dump ground but also in taking care of it in a more satisfactory man ner at the point of disposal. A definite date was not set for starting the service, that de- J pending somewhat upon the ac The council reached another important decision Monday night in tne matter ot acquiring a hea vy duty tractor for use on the city streets and such other duties that may develop. Since the state highway crew is unable to do the street repairing and there is lit tle likelihood that a contracting firm will be available this year, the city has made extensive study of the possibility of purchasing a machine that will meet the re quirements. Information is be ing sought relative to a tractor equipped with bulldozer, scarifi er, blade, and possibly a loader and a street sweeper. Versatile machines of this nature are be ing put out by the big machin ery companies and advertising received by the city reveals that the purchase price is within rape of the average small city. Thorough investigation will be made of several machines before the council moves toward acquir ing one. Definite need of equipment is seen in the repair and practical reconstruction of K street. The paving is so badly broken that it will be necessary to use a scari fier to complete the break up and permit reestablishing the grade. With grading attachment on the tractor the city proposes to buy and other equipment already o hand It will be possible to do the repairing and a reasonable am ount of construction work with out employing outside concerns. Police Chief Gordon Grady re ported to the council that Sat urday night policing is more than a one-man job and requested an assistant throughout the month of August, as well as additional police during the rodeo. He was empowered to acquire the need ed help. o FORMER SUPT. HERE George Corwin, for five years superintendent of the Heppner schools, was a brief visitor here Fridav. He was accomDanied bv Mr. McCarthv. head football coach at the Oregon College of Education at Monmouth, and the jC. L. Hodge took him to Pendle men were here on a hurried trip ton through eastern Oregon in search 0 of prospective footbal material Mr. and Mrs. John Karlik and tor McCarthys 1948 squad. Cor- win is now superintendent of ; guests at the home of Mr. and schools at Independence and also ; Mrs. George eGrtson the past does some instructing in the tea- ; week. Mrs. Karlik is Mr. Gert cher training department at OCE. son's daughter. Lena District's Representative i ' 1 --J' I ' . I ''uS? ' V-i f, V, '1 - I While browsing around lone one day recently. Photographer Louis Lyons snapped this picture of Omar Rietmann's new hard ware store building. Completed in 1947, this is one of the better business buildings in the county and represents the results of many years of successful operation by Mr. Rietmann. Door settings are in glass brick, giving the front a neat and artractiTe appearance. Heppner Photo Studio. Debris Daused by Unusually Heavy Growth Creates Fire Hazards One of the greatest worries for est service officials have is the dry season that period when rank growth created by excep tionally wet spring weather be comes dry and highly inflamma ble. Forest workers well know the danger involved in a combination of dry grass and timber slashings and their nights are robbed of restful sleep in anticipation of what a careless smoker or a play ful bolt of lightning may start. The time of the year is at hand when this uneasiness is fully warranted. It is more justified this year than in other years due to the unusually rank growth in the forests. To forestall as much danger of fire as possible, both state and national forest officials have acted to curtail use of the forests, withdrawing certain ar eas from unregulated public use. All Umatilla National Forest lands within the following nam ed areas described in the procla mation issued July 28 by Gover nor John H. Hall are designated as areas of fire hazard. These include Wilson creek area; Deso lation creek area; Johnson creek area; Big Rock Flat area, and Red MRS. COX GIVEN FAREWELL BY COURTHOUSE EMPLOYEES Employees at the county court house took a little time off Fri day afternoon to bid goodbye to Mrs. Lester Cox, nee Maxine East, who was leaving the county clerk's office after being employ ed there the past year. A wat ermelon feast was enjoyed in honor of the occasion. Mrs. Cox was succeeded by Mrs. Fred Parrish who began her duties Monday morning. o TRACTOR UPSETS ON DRIVER Fred W. Lenz is in the hospital at Pendleton folowing an acci dent this morning at the J. B. Snyder place. Mr. Snyder had given him some wood and Mr. Lenz had taken his little tractor and trailer to pick it up. In back ing around to put the trailer in position for loading he ran over an embankment and upset the tractor. He was given an examin ation here and it was found that a rib was fractured. Fearing that i he might have suffered other in- juries, his phsician thought it ! best to send him to the hospital , daughters trom Portland were j:V.i-' '-o m - ' - -Mr When the dancing public gathers at the Civic Center pavilion in Heppner Saturday evening it will be to pay homage to Princess Lorraine, rep resentative of the Lena district and sponsored by the Heppner Rodeo association. Princess Lor raine is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swaggart. She U 15 years of age and is a soph omore in Heppner high school. Hill area. According to information re leased from the local ranger's office, going or being upon the said lands on and after August 1, 1948, until futher notice, is pro hibited except with written per mit issued by the local forest of ficer No permit shall be required of any actual settler going to or from his home. These permits may be obtained at Heppner Ranger station, Opal Guard sta tion, Tupper and Bull Prairie guard stations. Roads passing through these areas, Western Route road, be tween Bull Prairie and Tupper, Red Hill road and the Morphine Ranch road, have been declared open areas for the convenience of the traveling public, according to Glenn B. Parsons, ranger in charge of the Heppner district. Recurring thunder storms are not bringng cheer to those whose duty it is to protect the forests or those who depend upon the tim ber for a livelihood. Fortunately, so far this year there have been few forest fires, and so long as the storms are accompanied by rain the danger is lessened. What's a Day or So in the Life of a Busy County Agent? Some of us who think we are busy and haven't time to do this or that should take a leaf from the book of a typical county ag ent. He's a guy who not only has a multiplicity of duties but one who gets things done. At least that has been the rule with the agents with whom the writer has had contact over the years. Take Nels Anderson, for in stance. There's enough work right in his office to keep him busy but being of an accommodating nature he finds it difficult to use a little word of two letters that would give him a little more lei sure time and the first thing he knows his calendar is full to overflowing. Right at present Anderson is in the process of preparing copy for the 1948 Morrow County Fair & Rodeo premium book. This in addition to the many calls on the phone and visitors in his office. There are myriad details relative to preparations for the fair which he as secretary of the fair board is called upon to attend to. While in the midst of all these activ ities, he finds it necessary to dash over to Hermiston on Wed nesday atternoon to attend a field day at the Umatilla branch experiment station. He will leave Friday afternoon for Albany to attend the Willamette Valley Lwe and Ram sale. Dick Wight man and Ronald Baker are ex pected to accompany him on this trip to pick out some ewe lambs for local 4-H club projects. In the meantime, if some ran cher's cow doesn't get alfalfa bloat, or the Mormon crickets fail in their frontal attack on Willow creek alfalfa fields, Anderson hopes to get his household goods moved trom the Millard Nolan house in town to the Ed Clark place just below town. And that's just the history of one week's ac tivities in the Morrow county ag ricultural agent's busy life. ' SMALL STREAM BIG FISH Claude Cox was proudlv exhib- iting a rainbow trout to friends this morning, not because bigger fish are not caught elsewhere but because this particular beau ty was caught in Willow creek. But Cox did not do the angling. His son Charles was the fisher man and the catch was made at the Wightman place. The rain bow measured 19 inches and tip ped the beam at three pounds. o Members of tlv Royal Canad ian Mounted Folice drill team to appear In the Pacific Internal ion. al Livestock exposition are also active Mounhes" and some of 'hem patrol the regions hevond the Arctic Circle. Electric Storms Cause Damage lo Timber and Crops Umatilla County Grain Loss Set at 100,000 Bushels Electric storms throughout the area the first of the week are reported to have caused exten sive damage to crops in Umatilla county and to have started fires in timber in the Umatilla Na tional forest. First intimation of crop dam age was brought to Heppner on Wednesday by Murl Cummings, Oegon and Washington director for federal crop insurance, and Ross Dimock, administrative of ficer for the FCI, Washington. D. C, who were en route to Uma tilla county to investigate the report that approximately 100,- 000 bushels of wheat had been destroyed by Tuesday night's storm. The officials were with out definite information and ex pressed the hope that the loss was not as heavy as the reports indicated. No reports had reached the fed eral officials about losses in Mor row county and they were of the opinion that this section had not been damaged. At least one fire was started in the Heppner district of the Uma tilla National forest by one or the other of the Tuesday storms. This was in the Tamarack station area and up to Wednesday afternoon the local ranger office had no in formation relative to the extent of damage done. The storm in the early morning hours Tuesday was of the dry variety, a lot of lightning and thunder. The orfe Tuesday evening was accompan ied by a heavy shower and may have aided in putting out timber and grass fires started in the morning. High winds the fore part of the week interfered some with grain cutting. One blow Sunday after noon sent clouds of sand up from the north end of the county but it broke the heat wave that had sent the mercury soaring towards the 100 level. Lightning caused cfamage to the Pacific Power & Light com pany high line at DeMoss Springs in Sherman county, causing a power interruption of several hours. (A story of Umatilla county storm in today's dailies places damages from hail and other causes at $750,000.) Combine Upsets In Sand Hollow Field Harvesting operations at the Ferguson ranch in Sand Hollow were delayed Tuesday when the combine upset The machine was working a steep hillside and was on the downgrade, cutting thru some fallen grain. When the low- erpart of the field was reached the slope was too steep and the separator turned over, landing on ' the header. Members of the crew, Harry Sherman and Ted Ferguson, were uninjured but the machine was considerably damaged. Gene Fer guson was running the tractor. PURCHASE AGREEMENTS PROTECT GRAIN PRICES Farmers in Morrow countv can protect the Drice of their prain crops this year through two me moes, Henry Baker, chairman of the county agricultural conserva tion committee, points out. Purchase agreements as well as commodity loans will be of fered to farmers as a means of price support on 1948 crops of wheat, oats, barley, and rye, Mr. Baker said. Terms will be prac tically the same as on the 1947 crops. Under purchase agreements, the producer states the maximum quantity of the commodity upon which he wished an option to de liver to the Commodity Credit corporation. The producer may then sell his grain on the market at the market price, or he may deliver to CCC any amount of his grain crop up to the stated max imum at the price-support figure. CCC will accept the grain under purchase agreements during the 30 days following the maturity date of the 1948 loans, which Is April 30, 1949, or earlier on de mand. Both loans and purchase agree ments may be obtained at the County Agricult Ural Cnn;rv:it(Mrt office. Priee-surjDort rates r.r on 194 grain crops in Morrow county are: Wheat, $2.02; barlev $1.26. EXAMINER COMING A drivers license examiner will be on duty at the Heppner city hall between the hours of 10 a. m. and 4 p. m. Tuesday, August 10, according to announcement from the office of Earl T. New bry, secretary of state. Persons wishing licenses or permits to drive are asked to get In tu. h with the examiner well ahead of the scheduled closing hour in or. der to assure completion of their applications with a minimum of delay,