Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1949)
Page 4 Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon, Jan. 27, 1 949 THAT ENWMPfS tor CvCKT BUSINESS NEED 7" Regular Style Envelope Standard and special site envel ope! for every need in many qualities and colors of paper stock. Window Envelopes With solid seal glassine windows in either standard or special posi tions to fit your needs. Catalog, Clasp, and Banker's Flap Catalog, Clasp and Banker's Flap envelopes for heavy mailings. Furnished in strong tan Kraft and in many sizes. Business Reply and Statement Envelopes Special reply and statement en velopes printed to your ordei speed up collections. Coin and Seed Envelopes Specially constructed for han usage in many stock sizes. Air-Mail Envelopes Printed in regular red and blu border with your return. Fiv. standard sizes. Eeonolope ( Improved Postage Saver) For mailing third class adverti: ing matter. Flap seal type wit the special "gum spot". Policy Envelopes (Open End' Carried in two weights and fou sizes. Waterproof Packing List Envelopes With or without clasp and foi metal eyelets. ) Drag, Theatre Ticket, Psy, Florist 2-vl many others. fecial Envelopes of all Kind. We are a direct factory representative for the Mail-We'l Envelope Company. GAZETTE TIMES HEPPNER, OREGON Phone 882 23 Below Weather Greeted Kinzuans Monday Morning By Elsa M. Leathers With Frank Otto in charge and Wayne Dunn assisting the Cub Scouts held their regular meet ing Sunday at Jeffmore hall. Af ter the business was attended to hot chocolate and hot dogs were enjoyed, with roller skating end ing the program. Glen Peterson was admitted to The Dalles hospital Wednesday afternoon after being bedfast here for some time. Glen is a high school student and it is with regret that he must leave school at this time. He has been In ill health for some time, having had rheumatic fever before coming to Kinzua. He is suffering from a heart ailment. Mrs. Peterson is staying with her son.' The Kinzua people awoke Mon day morning to find old man winter very much in evidence. Many could not face the 23 below to go to work. However, by noon it had warmed up considerably. Frozen water pipes, and pipes blowing up were the general dis cussion. But the main question is. how long will it last? The American Legion auxiliary met Monday evening and 11 new members were initiated. Refresh ments were served to 26 ladies in the confectionery, consisting of ice cream and cookies. Mrs. Ed Hash of Vancouver, Wash., was visiting her daugh ter, Mrs. J. B. Armstrong, the past week. Also Miss Aliwayne Hash of Hetinger, N. D.. was visiting relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Arm strong, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hash and Mr. and Mrs. Ted Chap man. Both left Friday for their respective homes. Both the A and B strings of basketball players from Kinzua and Fossil high school had tough luck with their games in Hepp ner Friday night, losing both games. The A string was leading until they lost by two points at the finish, 30-32. The girls volley ball beat Heppner girls, 22-24. Next scheduled game is with Arlington on their floor, Jan. 25. Five of the new modern houses that have been under construc tion since in the late fall, have been completed and those occu pying them are Mr. and Mrs. Ray Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Doerr, Mr. and Mrs. John Green, Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Peyton and Mr. I and Mrs. Vernon Boursier and family. Several Masons went from here to Heppner Friday evening, some to take the third degree, "Most Exalted Master." Those going over were Lester Halverson, Lyle Ostrander, Al Rudd and Joe Hays; from Fossil, Andy Staig and Jerry Morris. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Davis took their infant daughter to The Dal les Thursday for a check up. On their return, they visited Miss WHEN FATHER CALLED NEW YORK How in a few short years, Long Distance has speeded service, improved clarity, lowered rates 1. Back In 1918 it was quite a thing to call long distance all the way across the country. Took a good set of lungs, too. In those days you had to use as much voice to talk long distance as you would in calling to another person eighty feet away across an open field. 2. Today it's just as easy to talk across the nation as it is to talk to someone just across the table from you. Continual improvements in the telephone instrument you use, in telephone lines and cables, in voice-boosting equipment along the way, make a normal voice carry 3,000 miles or more with ease. 4. Takes less tlm today to get your connection. Now calls go through in an average of leu than two minutes. These arc just a few examples of the way telephone service grows in value . . . becomes a better buy. A local call lull costs just a few pennies. Compared to other prices, telephone service is one of your biggest bargains today. pip 3. Rates have gone down amazingly. In 1918, Father paid about $18.00 for the miracle of talking Coast-to-Coast. Worth it, too. By 1928, we'd been able to drop rates to about $9.00 for a three-minute station daytime call. And today you can make the same call for just $2.50, plus tax Here's one of today's big bargains. me Pacific Telephone (Sj and Telegraph Company More than 70,000 people working together to fur nish ever-better telephone set vice to the West MARCH OF DIMES 1 MISS SIMS ENCAGED Mr. C. M. Sims announces the engagement of his daughter, year. Otherwise, the subscription will be extenoed according to the amount sent in, and this may irove disappointing to the sub scribers. 'Marjorie Helen, to Mr. David E. 'Allison. The announcement was made recently at the Kappa Kap pa Gamma sorority house at Ore gon State college. Miss Sims, who is a niece of Dr. and Mrs. A. D. McMurdo, Miss Lulu Hager and Mr. and Mrs. J O. Hager, is teaching in the high school at Hlllsboro. Mr. Allison is completing his senior year at Oregon State col lege where he Is affiliated with Beta Theta Pi fraternity. He Is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Ira S. Allison of Corvallis. Try a G T Want Ad for results. s'c or these -U MAYFL0WER PRODUCTS I5" 1 , Standard Milk and Cream -,.V I ' Homogenized Milk -tSSl P Buttermilk Butter . V f , I " 4 Whipping and Table Cream raSfin 4 Ice Cream Chocolate Drink -AiD siYV 7&S$ cheddar Chee Cottage CneeM 3 JANUARY 14-3 Novel Ideas Invoked to Raise Funds in March of Dimes Campaign The oft-cursed parking meter has gone to work for the March of Dimes in at least four Oregon cities, Dr. E. T. Hedlund, Port land, chairman of the state's 1949 campaign, reports. All meters in Albany, Lebanon and Sweet Home are serving the dual purpose of raising funds for the March of Dimes and taking money from motorists for the ex penses of city government. The curbside devices in the three places have been equipped with cardboard signs which urge driv ers to drop in a dime to aid the annual drive for polio funds. Blanche Davis briefly at Condon. Mrs. Owen Leathers Jr. visited Mrs. Carl McDaniel and daugh ter Carolyn at Heppner Friday night. Mrs. Leathers is on the volleyball teams from Fossil. Floyd Thomas and Mrs. Ger trude Beard and Fred Shell went to The Dallas on Saturday. Mr. Thomas received treatment for his back while Fred Shell was consulting the doctor about his broken leg. Wallace Hendrix, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Beard and Earl Williams re turned to Kinzua Saturday from London, Ky., where they had planned to spend only 10 days. Due to the blizzards there and also in the mountains their visit was somewhat extended. They have made this trip many timps. but maintain that all the high ways were the worst they had ever encountered. Mark Jellick is able to be around town this week end on crutches. His leg was fractured three weeks ago in a basketball game. He expects to return to school this week. Kinard McDaniel spent the week end at Heppner visiting his mother, Mrs. Sam McDaniel Sr., and attending to business. Van Bouner and Bob Warren left Tuesday for their home at Macks Creek, Mo., where they ex pect to remain. Jack Samples went to The Dal les Thursday for a physical check up. He is to have his ton sils removed in two weeks. Leo nard Samples and Joan Otto ac companied him. Invitations are being received this week for a bridal shower given Saturday, the 29th, in hon or of Mrs. Kels Collins. Mrs. Jerry Rood will be hostess at her home. Paul Delvo received word this week that his aged father, Paul Sr. passed away at his home in Keewatin, Minn. Due to bad wea ther and travel conditions Mr. Delvo could not attend the fun eral. Wait Hiatt left Saturday for Seattle where he will enter a hos. pital for a major operation on his back. He has been employed at the mill. Jerry Rood went to Portland on Monday to consult a skin doctor. Mr. Rood is suffering from a skin infection on his hands. "The dimes drop right through into the till," Dr. Hedlund ex plained. "City employees separ ate the nickels from the dimes, turning the latter over to March of Dimes officials in their com munity. The meters make won derful colection devices, judging from results." The novel idea was initiated in Albany by David White, Linn county chairman. Word of its success spread with the result that Lebanon and 'Sweet Home also are profiting from the inno vation. George T. Benson, Grant coun ty chairman, has informed Dr. Hedlund that all overtime park ing fines levied against motorists in John Day are being given to the drive. The John Day bowling alley is helping, too, by assessing every kegler a nickel whenever he misses the head pin. Nearly all chain and independ ent theaters in the state are stag ing basket collections during "National March of Dimes Mo tion Picture Theater Week," Jan. 24 through 31, Dr. Hedlund said. He commended the manage ments, saying that "their gener ous cooperation will mean thou sands of additional dollars for the campaign in Oregon alone." NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS The subscription price to the Heppner Gazette Times was rais ed to $3.00 per year as of Janu ary 1, 1949. That means that all who did not pay un prior to clos ing time of the office December 31, 1948, are expected to remit $3 00 instead of $2.50. 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