Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, September 1, 1949 Poge 8 . t n-..-.. j jmk L. r.i r,f urvks with her rar-Wr brother-in-law is seriously IViirt. L-U( J nnu uhuii- join - - ( t-r Allrr, Ruth and Martha re- rnts, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spittle, ill and she has gone to be with turned the laM of the week from j Mrs Lucy Kodgers has been vis- j her sister. Mrs. Sara MeNamer AHl..rla where they spent a pleas-'iting in Seattle the past week. -took her as far as Pasco. A "Taxpaying development dollars invested by private industry help all of us." WILLIAM E. BERNEY tmiJinl, 1 1U ITi'j Cbjmbtr Comment A (HILLION POUNDS Of NEW WIRE will b put into iervice by Pocific Power & tight crewmen thii year. New subnotions, 9reoiors, poles. o"ier equipment will bring 1949 PP&l construction budget in this growing region to more than $9 million. Cost of new construction by Pacific Power & Light since V-J day will total more than S.OOO.OOO. These are development dollars. They are taxpaying, job-making dollars, invested here in the Northwest to help meet your electrical needs. Power requirements of this fast-grow ing Pacific Northwest demand a steady flow of these development dollars. That is why all of us want investors to look on thil region is a land of opportunity, and of fair reward. The investor whose dollars help extend and improve your low-cost electric service, while sharing your tax burden, is truly i Partner in Progress! Pacific Power & Light A progressivt power system businesi managed 4-H CLOTHING CLUB MEETS The lone 4 H clothing club met at the home of Mrs. John Graves Thursday afternoon to finish gar. ments that will be exhibited at the fair. Booths were planned and he completed garments were ar ranged for exhibition. Ingrid Her mann and Ruby Ann Rietmann performed a shrinklng-of -cotton materials demonstration that also will be presented at the fair. o CONDUCTS WORKSHOP Mrs. Omar Rietmann of lone conducted a third cotton dress workshop for lone women last week to prepare for a better dress workshop in October. o Mrs George Macready and children have been visiting at the home of Rev. and Mrs. Elvon Tull since Saturday evening. They returned to their home in Cottage Grove this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Barger have added the fifth daughter to their family as of this morning, at Pendleton hospital. She weigh, ed in at 6 pounds 7 ounces and her name is Deborah Kay. Mr. and Mrs. Merle Becket and son Paul returned last week from a two-week vacation in the Tie ton mountains and In Yellow stone Park. Merle said they used eight rolls of film to record scenes and happenings of the trip. Sixty-three of the shots were good. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Collins and Mr. and Mrs. George Ross were visitors a few days at the W. C. Collins home. All have returned : to their homes in Cottage Grove except Mr. Hollins who remained for a couple of weeks to assist I in his nephew's cleaning estab- ; lishment. f Visitors in Heppner and Lex ington the past week were Mr. and Mrs. Henry Welke and son Donald of Harvard, 111. Mrs. Wei- ke is a niece of the Rauch broth ers and Mrs. Alex Hunt and Mrs. G. Hermann. Mr. Welke is a prin. ter and true to the traditions of the trade he called at the Gazette Times office to keep in touch with the smell of printer's Ink. The visitors are spending a few days in Portland this week and will return to the county for an other visit before turning home ward. Miss Leta Humphreys enter tained a few friends at dinner last Thursday night in honor of Mrs. Hazel Gowan of Pasadena, Calif., who made an overnight Visit in Heppner. Enjoying Miss i Humphreys' hospitality were Mrs. Gowan, Mrs. J. O. Turner, Mrs. Charles Vaughn and Mrs. Joseph ine Mahoney. All were members kf the class of 1911 of Heppner high school and reminiscing and intensive visiting were the order PLAYERS EAGER Continued trom page one baekfield of returning lettermen. at right half; Norman Ruhl, 180 pound senior at left half, and Bob Bergstrom, 190-pound senior at fullback will form the nucleus of the team. Marion Green, 145 pound junior, Is a likely candi date for the quarterback position, although he is lacking in experi Melvin Piper, 175-pound junior ence. Unless shifted to a weaker point in the line, Letterman Phil Smith will return to the center spot this year and Letterman Jim Orwick, 150-pound senior, irob- ably will play guard. o WINS HIGH PRAISE Mrs. Edna Turner and Mrs. Eth- Portland shoppin gaud visiting Mrs. Norman Nelson won high I e' Zeimantz spent last week In relatives and friends praise last week for a report on a stale council meeting which she gave before an assemblage of' Morrow county home extension workers at an officers' training I conference at the Church of Christ. Miss Mabel Wilson, coun-1 ty home demonstration agent said Mrs. Nelson's report had com-1 pletely clarified actions of the i state council that previously had been mere mystery to county unit j officers. A special recognition cer emony at the conference honored Mrs. Ernest Heliker, Mrs Mark- j ham Baker and Mrs. W. E. Hugh-1 es, retiring officers in the home i FOR SALE 2 -bedroom home, oil furnace. 403 N. Main. See Ralph Benge or phone 2284. 24c Mr. and Mrs Everett Hayes, son , extension organization. Leland and daughter Mildred of Joseph and Jim Rounsavel of Wallowa were in Heppner a few hours today. They left Joseph at 3 this morning to pick up a grain truck here and took time to say hello to Mrs. Hayes's various rel atives before heading back to the "Switzerland of America." Billy McCaleb's friendly coun tenance is missing at the post office window this week while he and his family are vacationing along the coast. Mrs. Earle Gilliam and Mrs. Clive Huston returned Friday from a week in Portland. Mrs. Gilliam attended buyers' shows while there, and Mrs. Huston met her daughter, Mrs. Herman Par ker of Pascq, who was in the city on a shopping expedition. o FOR SALE One 8-room house; Dam, porcnes ana sneas. nemy i fruit trees of various kinds and good gardeji plot. Inquire Wm. L. McCaleb Sr., 101 Gale St. .... 24-25p DAILY RODEO TICKETS Will be sold at the following prices: General admission, September 9 (any seat except reserved) ..$1 .65 Grandstand, September 10-1 1 ..$2.60 Bleachers, September 10-11- ..$1.65 Children, admission free September 9 $1 for bleacher seats Sept. 10 and 1 1 No reduction on grandstand tickets for September 10 and 1 1 . Buy your tickets at the Main street booth from 4:30 to 6 p. m. on any week day. of the evening. NOTICE OF STREET VACATION Notice is hereby given that Dr. A. D. McMurdo, Neva Matteson and Emma Hager have presented their petition to the Common Council of the City of Heppner, Oregon, to vacate the following portion of Race Track Street with in the Corporate limits of said City of Heppner, to-wit: I That portion of Race Track Street lying between Lots 1, j 2 and a fraction of Lot 3 in I Block 3, Morrow's Addition to j the City of Heppner, Morrow County, State of Oregon, and ; a fraction of Lots 1 and 2 in j Block 3 of Jones' Second Ad dition to the City of Heppner, Oregon; and the Common Council has set Monday, September 19, 1949 at j the hour of 7:30 p. m. at the Council Chambers in said City as the time and place for hearing objections or remonstrances to the vacation thereof and any ob jections or remonstrances will be heard by the Common Council at said time and place. Dated this 1st day of Septem ber, 1949. WALTER BARGER, JR. City Recorder. STAR go REPORTER Admission prices afternoon and evening, nnleii ipe olfloauy advertised to be otherwise l Children i Est Prloe .17, Ped. Tax .03, Total too; Orade and Hifh School Students IS years and oeeri But Prise .40.' Fed. Tax .10, Total 50c; Adults: Est. Prloe ,60c, Fed. Tax .10, Total 60c Every child occupying a seat must havs a ticket. shows start at Ti30 p.m. Boxoffioe open evenings Sunday shows oontlnuous starting at 1 p.m. Ail other until p.m. The schedule during August will be as follows; Same program Sunday and Monday, Sunday shows continuous irom i p.m. Same program Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Double-bUl rrlday and Saturday, Saturday show starts at 7 p.m. program Sunday shows continuous from 1 p. m. Saturday shows start at 7 p. m. All other evening shows start at 7:30 p. m. Friday-Saturday, Sept 2-3 The Green Promise Walter Brennan, Marguerite Chapman. Robert Paige, Natalie Wood, Ted Don aldson At Last! The 4 H on the screen! There's a healthy slice of Americana in this sim ple story of farm life with all its happi ness and tears. (Also in the cast is Jeanne LaDuke, the 4 H girl from Mt Vernon, Indiana). Plus Horseman Of The Sierras Smiley Burnette-Charles Starrett action and comedy adventure. Bugs Bunny Sunday-Monday, September 4-5 Beautiful Blonde From Bashful Bend Betty Grable, Cesar Romero, Rudy Vallee, Olga San Juan, Sterling Holloway, Hugh Herbert El BrendeL Porter Ha!L Chris-Fin Martin, J. Farrell McDonald, Chester Conklin A cock eyed comedy wiih funny scones, saucy dialogue and Grable as a rootin', toolin', shootin' gal of the raw-boned west. In Technicolor. Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday, Sept 6-7-8 The Paleface Bob Hope, Jane Russell, Robert Armstrong, John Litel, Samuel S. Hinds, Jack Searl The laughs are headed this-a-wuy from the Dirty Shame Saloon, with Hope off on the Road to Ruin with the most famous female outlaw in the whole U. S. A. WELCOME to the MORROW COUNTY FAIR Sept. 8-9-10 and RODEO Sept 9-10-11 The shows both Friday and Saturday of Rodeo will start at 7 p. m. a:.TOsmyi-, 4i!aaaaj 'ST . . rr. j sWrTT Everyone is Talking about f3p V". : A3 the 1949 FAIR an There will be three big nights of dancing with Jimmie Whetmore and his Orchestra to end each day of Rodeo. Redwood Empire Shows will provide the carnival entertainment that is al ways a part of a good fair and rodeo. Rodeo stock furnished by Howard Johnson will provide the bareback and saddle-bronc riding, bulldogging, calf roping, and wild cow milking . . . You'll come, of course! While this is the picture of the grand cham pion 4-H Fat Steer of the 1948 fair, there will be many like this one at the 1949 Fair. This is an example of the beef that will be of fered for sale by twenty two eager 4-H mem bers, who have fed and fitted the animals dur ing the past year. Fat lambs and pigs will be offered for sale, too. Many of the steers will be the finished product of feeders that were donated by interested persons and caught by 4-H members at the 4-H Calf Scramble which was enjoyed by all who saw it at the 1948 Fair and Rodeo. 9:00 a. m. 9:30 a. m. 9:30 a. m. 1 :00 p. m. 8:00 p m. 8:30a. m. 9:00 a. m. 1 :00p. m. 3:00 p m. 7:30 p. m. 10:00 a. m 3:30 p. m. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 All exhibits entries close 4-H Agricultural contests Judging of Open Class, Home Economics-School-Flower exhibits Judging of 4-H Home Economics and Agri cultural exhibits 4-H Style Review at Heppner Civic Center FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 4'H Home Economics Contests Open Class Livestock Judging Finish judging of all Open Class and 4-H exhibits Saddle horse winners parade in rodeo arena 4-H Fat Stock Auction Sale SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 PARADE Calf Scramble in rodeo arena rr73 1 -. tv'ij3d I is si iiinr ."...sgr-. -yJit.'.. ,, , , , r, Morrow County Fair & Rodeo Sept 8 - 9 o 10-11