Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, November 10, 1949, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, November 10 1949
Page 3
Monument Grange
Elects Officers
For Ensuing Year
The Monument grange held Its
annual meeting November 4. At
this meeting the following offi
cers were elected: Master, Lewis
Batty; overseer, Bill Gates; lec
turer, Clara Flower; steward,
Dane Broadfoot; assistant stew
ard, Gub Slrecker; chaplain, Rev.
Harris; treasurer, Millie Wilson;
secretary, Edith Batty; gatekeep
er, Roy Cork; Ceres, Bubbles
Gates; Pomona, Lucy Ann Broad
foot; Klora, Maude Harris; exec
utive committee, Clarence Holm
es. Mr. and Mrs. Duane Cumings'
baby daughter, Dianna D, was
born on November 1 at the Blue
Mountain hospital.
The MMM club held Its regular
meeting at the home of Mrs. Ethel
Schafer, with Mrs. Doris Capon
as co-hostess. There was a large
attendance. It was decided at this
meeting that the club should
sponsor the Thanksglvng dance.
Committees were appointed to see
about the music, gymnasKim and
supper. After the business meet
ing refreshments were served.
The Stitch Along 4-H club held
a meeting on November 5. New
officers were elected as follows;
Loretta Music, president; Judy
Stirewalt, vice president; Mary
Powell, secretary; Joan Roach,
news reporter; Marge Batty, song
and yell leader. Sewing 1-A have
started on their needle cases.
Clayton Sweek, Earl Lewis and
Barney Cork spent the week end
in Portland..
Mr. and Mrs. Merlyn Weissen
fluh of Portland spent their vaca
tion visiting relatives and friends
in Grant county. While here they
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Sweek, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Barn
ard and Mr. and Mrs.l Theron
King.
A baby girl was born at the
Blue Mountain hospital Novem
ber 5 to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mellor.
The maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Fleming.
Mrs. Jean Devore and Mrs.
Chryslle Enrlght drove to Prairie
City on Saturday for Mrs. Joava
Enright and infant daughter.
Mrs. Moya Gilman was hostess
to a dinner party Thursday in
honor of her husband, Willard
Gilman's, birthday. The Invited
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Miles
Gilman and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Settle.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Leathers
drove to Bend Thursday. They
were accompanied by Mrs. Mor
ton Cupper and Roy Cork.
Rho Bleakman of Top took his
wife and Mrs. Anna Cork to Mt.
Vernon Thursday where they
'Joined Mr. and Mrs. Dave Mus-
Prepay Inheritance and
Estate Taxes-thru life insurance
-:- C. A. Ruggles -:-
Equitable Life Insurance
Society
BEGINNING MONDAY, NOV. 7
TRAILER
HOUSE
COURT
will be ready for occupancy . . Heated
laundry, bath house and toilet facili
ties. Located at 206 Water Street
L. D. NEILL
grave In a motor trip tj Salt Lake
City. They will visit one ol Mrs.'
Musgrave's sisters, who Is from
the east. She Is visiting her son ;
in Salt Lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johns were
attending to matters of business
in John Day and Seneca Tuesday.
Mrs. Johns' brother, Tom Shanks,
accompanied them home. Tom is
driving a new coupe.
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Wright of
Mt. Vernon were overnight guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Round lues-
day. Mr. Wright is a brother of
Mrs. Round. While here he pur
chased some cattle from Mr.
Round.
Logging operations lor the Big
4 Lumber company closed down
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Flower and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roach were
business visitors in Canyon City
and John Day Thursday. It is un
derstood that Mr. Flower has pur
chased a portion of Mr. Roach's
ranch, known as the old Lee Neal
place.
A baby girl, Beverly Jane, was
born at the Blue Mountain his
pital November 1 to Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Enright. The proud paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Enright, and the maternal
grandmother is Mrs. Daisy Simas.
Mr. and Mrs. Arlot Fleming and
children of Alaska are visiting re
latives and friends in Monument
this week. Arlot is enjoying some
elk hunting while here.
Some of the lucky elk hunters
of this community are Stanley
Musgrave, Rho Bleakman, Zephyl
Harrison, Perry Wilson, BUI Gates
and both Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Holmes.
The HEC club met at the grange
hall Wednesday to hold an elec
tion of officers and to clean the
hall before grange night on the
4th. Lydia Capon was re-elected
chairman and Reta Cupper was
appointed secretary. It was decid
ed to sponsor a banquet honor
ing the 4-H club members and
their parents. The date will be
November 10.
An REA meeting was held in
Long Creek Wednesday. Emory
Mooie, Dempsey Boyer, George
Stirritt, John Simas, Rho Blaek-
man, Stanley Musgrave and
Chance Wilson attended rrom
Monument.
Emory Moore was passing the
cigars Wednesday. He is the
proud father of a bouncing baby
boy born October 30 at St. An
thony's hospital in Pendleton.
The young man has been named
Emory Addison.
Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Johnson,
Miss Hathaway and Manley Far-
rar of Bend were week-end guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cork.
The bazaar given by the women
of the MMM club was a financial
success. It was given to help with
the church work.
The Monument community was
saddened to hear of the sudden
death of Mrs. Mary Marcus last
Saturday evening. She took sick
about 5 p. m. and passed away at
10 p. m. No arrangements for the
funeral had been made up to the
time this is written. Mrs. Marcus
had lived here many years and
leaves beside her relatives a host
of friends to mourn her passing.
o
News From
C. A. Office
A fresh supply ' of red squill
prepared rat bait is now available
at this office. A supply will be
Uont nn hnnd at all times now as
the weather is cooler, enabling us
I to keep it fresh.
IrniiB ncMOCRACY bvMaiT
M.TYPICALC AMERICAN
IN THC DtVILOPMENT OF AMERICA MANV TYPICALLY AMERICAN OOAUTlEJ
HAVE COME TO BE ASSOCIATED WITH PARTICULAR SECTIONS OF THE
COUNTHV. THE TERM "YANKEE THK.IFT", FOR EXAMPLE, STEMS FROM
NEW ENGLAND, yET WE R.ECOONIZE THRIFT AS A TRA0ITI0NAL
VIRTUS OFAWERH."l9 in Btwtpvi., (ff.
) ' . z .
:7.
V 11' 1 I-VS.!
NO BETTER EVIPENCEOF THRIFT ivn,.NAL CHARACTERISTIC
CAN BE FOUND THAN IN THE OWNERSHIP OF LIFE INSURANCE
BY FOUR OUT OF FltE AMERICAN FAMILIES.
THEY SAIN, THROUGH THEIR THRIFT, SECURITY FOR THE FUTURE
AND CONFIDENCE TO 60 FORWARD TO FRESH ACHIEVEMENTS.
lV '''''
Permits Required For
Cutting Christmas
Trees, Forester Warns
Christmas is siill 45 days away, I
but already the Christmas tree I
cutters are combing the Oregon I
woods for likely holiday greens I
However, according to George .
HEW
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Buy Wise-
Buy FrorajNew Car Dealer
'47 Kaiser 4-door sedan
Low mileage like new
'47 Fraxer
Excellent condition
'42 Willys Americer
Good gas mileage A-l shape
4-Whecl drive Jeep Station Wagon
4-Wheel drive Jeep Truck
See Us For
Good
Used Jeeps
S1377
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$497
Caspersen & Hildenbrand Co.
HOME OF THE MIGHTY JEEP
Phone 1 735 or 1 47 Pendleton, Oregon
This is the bait that was so
successfully demonstrated and
used by farmers last spring. Over
500 pounds of the bait was sold
during the time this office handl
ed it. Many good reports on kills
were made to this office.
With the coming colder weath
er rats are moving in to protec
tion of farm buildings where
grain and other feed is plentiful.
There, rats multiply rapidly and
cause much loss in damage to
feed and other property to which
they have access. This red squill
bait is easy to use and is not poi
sonous to other animals. It is sold
here at cost.
Use of 215-T or 2,4-D in fall,
winter and early spring months
on stumps will prevent resprout
ing. The ester of 2,4,5-T has prov
ed more effective than ester of
2,4-D on certain species and for
general stump trelment a mix
ture of one pint of ester of 2,4-D
and one pint ester of 2.45-T in 10
gallons of kerosene, diesel or No.
2 fuel oil has been found effect
ive. 2.4,5-T has been used in oil
without 2,4-D and good results
have been obtained on cotton
wood, poison ivy, poison oak,
blackberries, bramble and maple.
NEWS FROM HDA'S OFFICE
Enthused over study at their
meeting last Wednesday, mem
bers of the county home exten
sion committee were enthused
over the research project aimed
at developing better designed and
better constructed work dresses.
Mrs Clara Edaburn, associate
home economist, is project lead
er, with Mrs. ette Frazier as
research assistant.
To find out what Oregon home
makers want in the way of work
dress design and construction,
questionnaires are being mailed
to various housewives throughout
the state. Homemakers are asked
to give their opinions on such
items as best sleeve length, desir
ability of belts and buttons, and
faults they have noted in the con
struction of ready-made dresses.
Later on, housewives will be
observed at work in their home
by Mrs. Edaburn and Mrs. Frazier
as a means of finding what parts
of the dress get the most wear
and strain during the normal
household tasks requiring bend
ing, reaching, etc.
Another phase of the program
calls for the home economists to
make figure type descriptions as
a means of better adapting dress
designs to women of various pro
portions. Most of the dresses and
dress patterns now available on
the market are designed primar
ily for young women with "ideal
figures" and are not suitable for
mature figures, homemakers have
found.
Dresses of various designs and
for vairous figure types will be
made on the basis of these find
ings and will be sent to from six
to twelve selected homemakers
for six month wearing tests. The
homemakers will mail the dress
es to the home economics depart
ment for laundering and ironing
to insure uniformity in that phase
of test work,
it is planned that the test dress
es will be on display at the June
1950 meeting of the slate home
economics extension council.
Once the final designs have been
approved, the patterns will be
made available to commercial
pattern companies and dress ma
nufacturers. Also discussed was the Azalea
House to be built on OSC campus
for girls desiring to live and work
in a cooperative house. Morrow
county's part will be carried by
the seven extension units. Mrs.
Vernon Munkers, Lexington,
chairman, will announce plans
for fund raising soon.
MERCHANTS
WISE
Advert ise!
sf,
77
DOUBLE
BARRELED C0MTEST!
Yis. over $2,000,000 in cash
Btid valuable prizes to be awarded by Crosby ami Crosley Dealers.
You got a double chance to win! FIRST a Local Contest judged by
local judges right in your own community. All you do is write your
reason in 50 words or less on the Local Entry Blank why we should
give you a new 1950 Shclrador Kpfriuer.it or. If our judges select yours
as the best reason, you will got a new 1950 Shclmdor Iiefriinator to
be mearded by ut ami dclirmd right to your home.
SCCOND a National Contest, in addition to and separate from
our local contests, where the same words you write for the Local
Contest (or different, if you prefer) may be submitted on the National
Entry Illank and compete for the Grand Frizes of cash, kitchens,
and refrigerators to bo awarded by Crosloy!
SEC US FOR ENTRY BLANKS AND CONTEST RULES.
IIHTLH i'HIIIH H' mi'M.R I.II7.VIJ
CASE FURNITURE CO.
V
Spaur, acting state forester, any
Christmas trees harvested for
commercial purposes must be cut
under the provisions of the Ore
gon conservation act and a per
mit secured prior to cutting Spaur
stated that permits can be secur
ed from the forestry department
in Salem or from the nearest
stale forestry department head
quarters within the various dis
tricts throughout the state. The
forester also stated that the land
owners permission must be se
cured and his name and address
included on the application filed
by the Christmas tree operator.
The Oregon act requires that
forest lands be kept in a produc
tive and growing state after the
removal of timber or other forest
crops. Under these provisions, the
commercial Christmas tree oper
ator is required to leave not less
than 300 trees per acre, with 100
well distributed. Old mature seed
trees may also serve as a seed
source where they exist on Christ
mas tree cutting a.reas. By leav
ing established young growth or
seed source, continued forest pro
duction on the area is insured.
All forest lands come within these
requirements except lands which
are being cleared for agricultural
purposes.
Mr. John Citizen, who wants to
take his family out on the week
end and cut his own Christmas
tree is not required to obtain a
permit. He must, however, first
obtain the landowner's permis
sion before cutting his tree.
The forester was emphatic that
he was not opposed to Old St.
.Nick and the Christmas tree har
vest. "It is a custom long estab
lished, and nothing should be
done to interfere with it," said
Spaur. However, ihere are certain
requirements which must be met
if Oregon's forests are to be kept
in a productive condition. The
conservation act sets out these
requirements, and if followed,
the harvest of the trees can be in
the nature of a beneficial thinning."
WAKE UP BUSINESS
By Advertising In
This Nrwipapw A.
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Better than ever! New "Dyna
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baffles the flood of the suds
ana jei water tlAtOC
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I i
TURKEY Dinner
BAZAAR-CARDS - BINGO
Lexington Grange Home Ec Club
LEXINGTON GRANGE HALL
Saturday Nov. 12
DUTCH AUCTION Complete
Thanksgiving Dinner
Dinner served 6:00-7:30
Adults $1.25 Children 50c
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See another Bendix "first" the
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ECONOMAT 1 V"
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LEXINGTON
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Enjoy your Fur Coat
Ladies, insure your fur coats for cover
age against all perils for just
$5.00
per year
See us for particulars
TUHNEH VMI lUUHEB AND GO
I
v. i&-t
(II like to see
self-supporting
"business go ahead
this way."
PAT O'NEIL
Prtiidtnt, Da)H, Wtihington, Chjmbtr ef CoMmirct
$5,500,000 WORTH of new electrtco! equipment ilemi navt gon Into rvlc on tn PPM iyitm In tn pail 12 montni.
lino trucks ort rolling out every day with loadi of wire, iniulotors, polt hardware, service transformers, and all the
other Items needed to help meet growing demands for low-cost electricity.
Since V-J Day, Pacific Power Slight lias spent more than $:5,000,000 on new construction.
These are development JolUrs tax-paying, job-making dollars invested here in the great
Northwest to help meet your electrical needs.
The power requirements of a fast-growing region demand a steady flow of these
icrclofmeiit dolUrs into the Pacific Northwest. That is why all of us want investors
to look on this region as 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 a Partner in Progress!
Pacific Power & Light
A progressive power sysfem business managed
JSE33