Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 27, 1949, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, October 27, 1949
Pag 3
lone Garden Club
Would Make Park
Out of Grove Site
By Mrs. ECHO PALMATEER
DATES TO REMEMBER:
October 28 Three Links club
at home of Mrs. Echo Palmateer.
October 29 Pomona at Willows
grange.
November 1 Auxiliary meet
ing in afternoon, Legion meeting
at 8 p. m.
November 2 Eastern Star so
cial meeting.
November 3 Better dress shop
at Masonic hall.
November 5 Jlebckah conven
tion at Lexngton.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bergstrom
were called to Portland on ac
count of the death of her father,
Gustaf Albin Anderson, October
23.
The Victor Rietmanns are hav
ing some remodeling and redecor
atinK done.
Mrs. Roderick McClain of Aloha
Is visiting at the Creston Black
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Davis of
Estacada were visitors at the It.
O. Ely home last week. Mrs. Da
vis is an aunt of Mrs. Ely.
Ninety dollars were taken In at
the dinner at the Valby Lutheran
church Sunday. Rev. Carl Soder
gren of Portland conducted the
services before the dinner and
told the history of Valby church,
which is 52 years old.
Around $.350 was taken in at
the Muranmha dinner, bazaar
and quilt sale at the grange hall
Saturday evening. The tables and
dining room were decorated in
keeping with Hallowe'en, with
black and orange crepe paper,
candles and fruits and vegetables
The quilt which took first prize
at the Morrow county fair was
sold at Dutch auction and brought
$M.
Ray C. Smith, area represent
ative from the Northwestern
Christian home for the aed at
Beaverton, was in lone one day
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Balsiger of
White Salmon, Wash, were lone
visitors one day last week.
Miss Alice Nichoson of Port
land spent the week-end with her
mother, Mrs. Edith Nichoson.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Thome visit,
ed relatives in Walla Walla re
cently. The American Legion and its
auxiliary held their meeting
Tuesday evening of last week.
Plans were made for a card party
to be held at the hall November
18. The auxilary members are
urged to bring gifts not wrapped
to the next regular meeting in
the afternoon of November 1 for
the gift shop at the Veterans hos
pital in Portland. After the meet
Ins refreshments were served by
Mrs. Cecl Thome and Mrs. Ted
Palmateer.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Campbell
and family of Warden, Wash.,
and Mrs. Vertie Campbell of Con-
nell, Wash, spent the week-end
at the Lloyd llowton home.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Swanson
and sons and Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Billings of Portland were week
end guests at the Garland Swan-
son home.
Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Voruz of
Pendleton were visitors at the
home of his niece Mrs. Omar Riet-
mann last week.
Mr. and Mrs. David Rletmann
of The Dalles were lone visitors
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Woods of
Portland visited with his sisters,
Mrs. Lana Padberg and Mrs. John
Bryson last week.
Mrs. B. C. Forsythe, Mrs. Noel
Dobyns and Mrs. Echo Palmateer
attended the Morrow county P-TA
council at Boardman Wednesday
of last week.
Several people from the town
cleaned up the cty grove Sunday.
It Is hoped, with the cooperation
of all, that the grove can be made
Into a city park in the near fu
ture and picnics can be held there
either private or community, This
project Is being backed by the
lone Garden club. A potluck din
ner was served at the Masonic
hall.
TJie social meeting of the Topic
club was held at the home of Mrs.
Franklin Llndsttom Saturday af
ternoon. A dessert luncheon was
served and pinochle and bridge
were played. Those wining prizes
were, for pinochle, high, Mrs.
Harlan McCurdy, low Mrs. Roy
Llndstrom; bridge, high, Mrs. C.
W. Swanson, low Mrs. Dixon
Smith. Hostesses were Mrs. Oscar
Lundell, Mrs. Gordon White and
Mrs. Llndstrom.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Olden of
Gresham and Mr .and Mrs. Ted
Hardesty of Portland spent Sun
day at the Walter Dobyns home.
Mrs. Olden is the mother of Wal
ter and Noel Dobyns and Mrs.
Mrs. Hardesty is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dobyns. Har
old Dobyns of Portland flew up
to spend Sunday here.
Elmer Peterson of Portland vis
ited here for a few days. He is a
brother of Henry Peterson and
Mrs. Walter Dobyns.
The Ameca club met at the Ma
sonic hall Wednesday afternoon
of last week. The hall was decor
ated with Hallowe'en colors and
refreshments were served by Mrs.
Richard Lundell and Mrs. Lloyd
Morgan.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lundell and
son Kenneth and Mrs. Mary
Swanson were Pendleton visitors
Monday.
Leo Drake and hunting party of
Hood River visited his brother,
Cleo Drake, last week.
Bert Mason, from near Port
land spent last week in lone.
Mrs. Darrell Padberg, Mrs. Ed
mund Bristow and Mrs. Ernest
McCabe were Pendleton visitors
Saturday.
Mrs. Frank Stewart and family
of Rupert, Ida. visited at the
Charles Carlson home this week.
Mr. and Mrs. John Stefani of
Canby spent the week-end at the
home of his brother, Arthur Ste
fani Sr. They brought up some
new cupboards for the new Ste
fani home on Main street.
At a library board meeting
Tuesday afternoon Mrs. Victor
Rletmann was elected secretary.
Children's books and chairs were
ordered for the library.
Registered Motor
Vehicles Surpass
Record in Oregon
Motor vehicles registered in Or-
eonn totalled 638.875 last month
to set an all-time record high,
Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry
reported today. Registrations ex
ceeded last year's total for the
same period by 10 percent and
topped those for all of 1948 Dy
38,000 vehicles.
The break-down shows 44,544
more passenger cars, 7,888 more
pickups, 3743 more trucks and
323 more motorcycles than last
year at this time. Buses, the only
vehicle classification to show I
Plan Now
To Give Your Portrait at
CHRISTMASTIME
We will be in Arlington
every Wednesday and
Thursday
Ph. 2772
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Adverttument
From where I sit ... ly Joe Marsh.
Now They're Sitting
Pretty
Bquint Miller, who's workinn as
a telephone lineman, was telling me
about some birds that got into a
fight with hia company.
Seem couple of woodpeckers
set up housekeeping in a telephone
pole. Nobody minded them living
there, but they kept pecking at the
wires causing one short circuit
after another.
Finally, the telephone people
who had nothing personal against
the birds Just atopped up the hole
where they lived. But they kept
coming back. At last, the company
donated that pole to the woodpeck
cra and set up a brand-new one for
their own uae 1
From where I sit, we'd all be bet
ter off if we were as tolerant with
our own kind as that telephone
outfit waa with the woodpeckers.
Let's consider the other fellow's
point of view whether It's his
right to live where he wanta, or to
enjoy a friendly glass of temper
ate beer or ale when and if he
a m r m m m m m v
W3
; H 'y - ' hid M
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XT J ''y!1":vM$)
Ml i
S I
GET YOUR COPY
Of RADIO LOG
Tlx konrfy aw MoyflowM
Indie log h at yovr dtolw'i
km Got yo ' MPr 4r-
AY FLO I'
Builds Better Babies
Wise mothers, who know the food value of fresh
milk and the importance of absolute purity, choose
Mayflower Milk for their youngsters. Always
Grade A purity, always tops in appetizing flavor,
and always carefully pasteurized Mayflower if
baby's best food value.
AT YOUR STORE
OR AT YOUR DOOR
decease, dropped 145.
Newbrv said resist rations have
climbed 50 percent since end of
1945, giving plenty of reason why
chance-taking by drivers or pe
destrians is more dangerous than
ever. He said 1948 traffic acci
dents were 53 percent greater In
number than those reported In
1945.
o
WILL PARTICIPATE AGAIN
IN "CROP" PROGRAM
Morrow county is among 18
Oregon counties that will parti
cipate in the Christian Kural
Overseas Program (CROP) to
feed the starving people of Eu-
rorje and Asia. Joe King, direct
or of the Oregon CROP program,
has announced.
King said a chairman for Mor
row county will be named soon.
The aim of the Oregon CROP
program is to send between 12
and 14 carloads of wheat, dried
milk, dried fruits, cheese and
other hulk oroducts to the hun
gry people of war-infested lands
as a gift from the rural people of
Oregon.
The CROP program is sponsor
ed by the Christian World Ser
vice, Catholic Rural Life and Lu
theran World Relief.
Solicitors will make a farm to-
farm canvass of the 18 counties
during the week of Nov. 6 to 1.1
and Thanksgiving day has been
set as the day for shipment of
all crops collected for the program.
WAKE UP BUSINESS
By Advertising In
Thi Newspaper
" if r
Many Long Distance operators ring telephone in number of aties across country...much as you dial a calL
SHE "PUSH-BUTTONS" CALLS COAST-TO-COAST
New system can put through calls in 30 seconds
1 . One of our newest developments to speed
your Long Distance calls is mis push-button
equipment. So complex it's almost a mechanical
brain, it's a key to a system which permits an
operator to call straight to telephones in other
cities . . . practically as fast as dialing across town.
Push-button or dial equipment now is used for
three out of four calls between dries.
3. Perhaps your next Long Distance call may
be handled this way. For the new plan is part of
our program to improve all service to make it
more valuable to you . . . and it's a bargain today.
A daytime station call to any point on the East
Coast on I v . 2. 50 plus tax ... the lowest rate ever.
Be Pacific Telephone
1-4 w
2. Quicker call completions are one big ad-
vantage of the push-button system. If you know
the number instead of just the name and address
we can ring the telephone you are calling in an
average of about thirty seconds after you lift the
receiver. That's three times as fast as we can serve
you if you don't know the number. So it's a good
idea to keep a list of those you call often.
Your telephone is one of
today's best bargains
and Telegraph Company
GIVE TO YOUR COMMUNITY CHEST...6IVE ALL YOU CAN.
INCREASES 'GLAD' INCOME L
A mid-western landscape contractor,
Paul V. Baker, visiting Lebanon in
194 became K Interested in the Glad
land Acres gladiolui farm that he
bought it He and his ex-GI son, James
S. Baker, have increased the gladiolus
acreage from l'i to 9 or from 480,000
to 2,200,000 quality bulbs. The inform
ative Gladland catalogue (it sells for
25c) lists 572 varieties, not including
300 atill on trial, or seedlings. Glad
land ships world-wide to 7000 commer
cial and amateur growers. The Bakers
say their rapid business progress was
made possible by cooperation from the
first National Bank of Lebanon.
111
tL. , yU ' ,
WHITf STAO,LEADER IN SKI TOGS
Young collegt graduate Harold S.
Hirsch in 1932 began designing cloth
ing especially for fellow skiers. From
the first they liked these functionally
(tyled White Stag ski togs made in
hia family's Hirsch-Weis Manufactur
ing Co, long-time maker of canvas
product and outdoor work clothes.
Today this still-growing Portland firm
(renamed the White Stag Manufactur
ing Co.) is the world's largest manu
facturer of ski togs... and its newer
line of sportswear are growing in
popularity. To maintain leadership,
Hirsch (left, with Charles Brown, head
pattern maker) strives continually to
ward product improvement For bank
ing needs. White Stag utilizes "func
tionally styled" services of FirstNationai.
SERVES WEST COAST FISHERMEN
Friends were punled when H. L. Web
ster, a perfectionist in fashioning split
bamboo falling rods, moved from New
England to Oregon. But Webster fore
saw greater opportunity by serving the
West Coast's anglers. He picked Glad
stone as a central location, and a year
ago began turning out hand-made rods
for all types of sports fishing. Orders
from sales outlets have grown steadily.
Recently bis H. L. Webster Rod Co.
moved Into larger quarters, equipped
with precision beveling, tapering and
laminating machines of his own design.
Webster nukes advantageous use of
sen ices of First National's Oregon City
Branch to keep his company growing.
Dehlnd each successful Oregon enterprise, you'll
find hard-working, clear-thinking individuals. Their
fields of endeavor often differ widely, but they have
a common ability for making the most of each oppor
tunity. This reflects sound planning, usually including
the effective use of helpful banking services. By ,
making a variety of such constructive service widely
available, banks in the First National Group help
Oregon grow family by family, farm by farm and
business by business. Make it a point to drop In toon
and tell us how we can help you.
1
(9
HEPPNER BRANCH
(FDISir NATIONAL BANK
OF PORTLAND
Fasten! Dacwaft tsussraste Cerawatle
(.:)