Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, February 16, 1950, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, February 16, 1950
Page 3
Monument Host
To Grant County
Stockmen's Assn.
The Grant County Stockmcns
association held its meeting in
Monument Saturday, February
U. There was a large crowd In
attendance. The ladies of the II
t. C. served dinner to 74 at noon.
County Agent Bill Farrell showed
some interesting pictures, after
which several talks were given.
Some of those from a distance
mat attended were Joe Oliver,
Wm. Farrell, Herman Oliver, Sam
Kerrins, Don Boyer and W. O.
Cummlngs of John Day; Sherman
Gutterldge, Garland Meadar and
Mr. Tuttle of Prairie City; Larry
Williams of Canyon City; Earl C,.'
Huff, Ontario, I!. N. Kelly, Vale;
Art Miaw, Uon Host-hiss, Burns;
Bill Suuthworth of Seneca; Elmer
Gocl.sey and Stanley Ilobgood of
Mt. Vernon; Mr. and Mrs. Bon
Carter and daughters, Mr. and
Mrs. Claude Rcsing and sons, Ted
Carter, Sam Carter, Long Creek;
Floy Hinton, Hamilton, and Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Martin of Day
ville and many others the writer
did not get to contact.
Thcron Keeney of Hamilton
was in Monument Saturday. He
statps that he is a very busy
man taking the census of all
livestock in northern Grant.
Bucky Flower was quite sick
last week and had to miss sev.
eral days of school, however he
is much Improved at this writing.
Mrs. Harold Cork entertained
at dinner February 4, honoring
her son Keith and nephew,
i Dwayne Johnson on their birth-
Spray Rite Sprayers
Accessories and High Pressure Hose
24 D Weed Killers .
Cattle Sprays
Krenite Dormant Spray
for Orchards and Shade Trees
Seed Treatments Ceresan
Custom Applications
John Ransfer
Phone 33F11 or 11 1 1 lone
day. Other guests were Dwayne's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Johnson and son, Sandy of Bend,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roach, dau
ghter Joan and son Charles and
Mrs. Dillie Leathers.
Mr. and Mrs. Bastein were din
ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rho
Bleakman Tuesday, February 7.
Mr. and Mrs. Bastein are new in
this community. They are living
on the ranch that Mr. Schafer of
Condon recently purchased from
Zephyl Harrison.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Enrlght
have rented the Top school house
and will move there in the near
future.
Mrs Lydia Capon, Clara Streck
er and Daisy Simas were attend
ing to matters of business in John
Day Thursday. Mrs. Capon picked
up the material for the March of
Dimes while there. Dempsey Boy
er is chairman for this district.
Mrs. Oulda Cork reported see
ing Mrs. Zephyl Harrison in John
Day Wednesday. Her friends In
Monument are glad to know that
she has been dismissed from the
hospital and Is able to join her
husband at Hermiston. They will
be guests of Mr. Harrison's brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Omahondra.
Ear! Barnard's brother, Fred
of Sumpter is here visiting.
Mrs. Rho Bleakman and dau
ghter, Mrs. Marvin Saddler sur
prised Mr. Bleakman's mother,
Mrs. Ida Bleakman with a birth-
Flatt's Transfer
and Storage
Heppner Ph. 1 12
The Dalles Phone 2635
114 E. 2nd St
Insured Carrier
OREGON WASHINGTON
FURNITURE MOVING
"We Go Anywhere.Anytlme"
day dinner of fried chicken, cake
and ice cream one day last week.
Bill Schultz of Dayville was
greeting friends in Monument
Tuesday.
The Big Four Lumber company
has been doing some repair work
on their mill. Just getting thjngs
in readiness for work when the
break-up comes.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Geinger, Al
vin Geinger, Bill Geinger, Conrad
Bellenbrock and Bud Engle were
down from Cottonwood Tuesday
to get some baled hay that Le
land Stewart brought In from
Vale for them.
The Howell brothers from T;ip
spent Tuesday dehorning their
cattle. They were assisted by
Maynard Hamilton.
Business matters took Mr. and
Mrs. Dempsey Boyer to The Dal
les Thursday. They returned Fri
day. They report lots of snow in
The Dalles.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Cutts
and Mrs. Clayton Griggs and
children drove to Heppner Friday
to have dental work done.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shank and
daughter, Laura Lee and Mr and
Mrs. George Starritt drove to Mt.
Vernon to visit Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Shank and daughters. Kay and
Dee Ann.
Grange 742 hold its meeting
on the 10th. Due to weather con
ditions it was postponed on the
3rd until the 10th.
Heppner Lumber company is
having its houses near the mill
site remodeled.
Mr .and Mrs. Henry Cupper had
as their dinner guesta Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gates, Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Fleming, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Cork and Mr. and Mrs.
Chet Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stockton of
Prineville visited Mrs. Stockton's
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Cork from February
3 to 5. Mr. and Mrs. Cork return
ed to Prineville with them where
they visited until February 8.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens were
called to Pendleton Tuesday be
cause of the illness of his father.
He underwent surgery Wednes
day. Their children are with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Farrens.
Some of the people who at
tended the basket ball game at
John Day last Tuesday between
the Chocolate Co-eds and John
Day's All Star team were, Mr.
and Mrs. Mead Gilman, Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Leathers, Mr. and
Mrs. Emory Moore, Jack Forrest,
Clayton Sweek and Earl Lewis.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Sweek and
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Fleming were
having dental work done in John
Day Tuesday.
Delmar Settle, accompanied bv
Wilbur Flower was attending to
Dusmess matters in John Dav
Tuesday.
Mr .and Mrs. Leland Stewart
were business visitors in Port
land this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Flovd Ferguson
left Friday for Mitchell where
they will have employment.
Mr .and Mrs. Bud Shocklev nf
Portland stopped Friday to visit
relatives in Monument on their
return to Portland. They had vis
ited for several davs with Mr.
Shocklcy's parents in Seneca.
Mr. and Mrs. Georee Canon
and girls were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hill Sun
day. Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Stub
blefield also spent the afternoon
visiting at the Hills'.
Rex Sweek is doing some car
pentering for Mr. and Mrs. Boyd
Hinton this week.
ings Bonds which matured In
Oregon last year, total redemp
tions In the State, which include
these maturities, dropped to $48,
020,000, which is six and three
quarter million dollars less than
redemptions for 1948.
Final figures for 1949 show that
total sales in this County were
$287,412, according to County
Chairman Mrs. Elaine George,
Sammons on tieing for second
place in the entire State of Ore
gon in the percentage of sales
for 1949 with a 22 climb in
purchases. Mr. Sammons stated
that this increase reserve can
not help but benefit everybody
in the County sooner or later.
In making these figures known
The eggs obtained from the brood
trout are held at the hatchery until
the eyes of the embryo fish begin
to appear. Snow or Ice Is then
packed around the trout eggs,
and they are shipped to trout
hatcheries throughout Oregon.
Trout Eggs Arrive At
with 232,686 of these sales being w; "
in E Bonds. Redemptions in thej Willamette Hatchery
County amounted to $113,741 for
The Willamette fish hatchery
Your Home Town Pa
per Only 3.00 a year
1949. Total sales in the county anas received its main allotment'
a ei-ieruii j j 01 l.uu.ouu rainoow iroui eggs,
year ago were $235,041 and red- tfle 0regon gtate Game Commis.
emptions were $135,308. according sion announced today. The trout
to George W. Mimnaugh State eggs were taken from fall -spawn-Director,
j ing brood stock at the Rock Creek
County Chairman Elaine Geo- j hatcherv-
i rne game commission aios
rge and the people of Morrow
county were
maintains fall-soawnine rain-
particularly con- bow stock at the Roaring River
gratulated by State Chairman and Oak Springs fish hatcheries.
DOG
MM
PAY LICENSE
THIS MONTH
AFTER MARCH 1 THE PRICE WILL BE DOUBLE
$1.00
$2:00
$2.00
$4.00
for each MALE or SPAYED FEMALE
: : for each FEMALE
for each MALE or SPAYED FEMALE
: for each FEMALE
Chapter 564, Oregon Laws 1949 requires that license plate shall be displayed on
dogs at all times.
C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheiiff and Tax Collector
a
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!. 7 ,isiS.-S
IT! ""
THE MAIL MUST GO
"The mail must go," says W. H. I. Padberg, "and that is
why I drive Fords. I had to try out several different
makes of cars before I had my eyes opened to the fact
that you just can't beat a Ford."
The above picture shows W. H. I. Padberg, local
mail carrier, after he had just returned from a long
drive over the toughest kind of snow drifted county
roads in sub-zero weather.
If you will test drive the new 1950 Ford car it will open
your eyes, too.
E&osewaM Motor (Company
Ford Sales and Service
May and Main Streets Heppner, Oregon
BULLDOZERS
HEAVY DUTY HYDRAULIC, ANGLE
$1695.00 Installed $1395.00 Installed
People of County
Increase Purchases
Of Savings Bonds
Release of final figures on sales
and redemptions of Unted States
Savings Bonds for 1919 shows
that Oregon people made the
State Office of the Savings Bonds
Division of the Treasury the pro
ducer of one of the two or three
largest sales volumes in the
State by buying the huge total
of $48,919,942 worth of E, F and
G Bonds.
, In making these figures known
to the public, E. C. Sammons,
State Chairman, pointed out that
the Treasury Department main
tains a paid staff of only four
persons in its Oregon Savings
Bonds office. He emphasized the
fact that it would be utterly im
possible for a staff of this size,
regardless of its efficiency or how
hard it worked, to exceed the
sales of the Liquor Control Com
mission or of the several other
large Oregon Institutions whose
annual sales run beyond $20,000
000. Mr. Sammos expressed the op
inion that this tremendous vol
ume of Savings Bond purchases
by Oregonians is attributable to
two things. First, to the fact that
this method of saving has become
a part of the normal way of life
of a great many Oregon people;
second, to the fact that a very
large number of business firms
and private individuals contribut.
ed in one way or another to in
creasing Oregon's Bond sales vol
ume. Many individuals gave sub
stantially of their time, hund
reds of Oregon firms maintained
a Payroll Savings Plan for their
personnel, banks continued to
handle the sale of roughly 859t
of the Bonds purchased within
the State without charge, and
newspapers, radio stations, com
pany publications and other
advertising media contributed
time and space towards keeping
Oregon people aware of the value
of consistent thrift.
Mr. Sammons took this op
portunity to express his thanks,
as well as those of the Treasury
Department, to the Oregon people
and business firms who took part
in the Savings Bonds Program,!
thus making this success story!
possible. I
Federal Reserve figures show!
lhat Oregonians bought S36.5S4.- i
794 m E Bonds last year, increas- j
ing their purchase of these small
er Bonds by 2",. A drop in the
sale of F and G Bonds, now in an
increasingly competitive field
was responsible for a drop of 4','t
in the State's total sales of E's, F's
and G's togeather, when compared j
to 1948.
Although there were approx
imately $7,000,000 worth of Sav-
Oliver D
International 14
Caterpillar 6
AC 7
Saager's Pharmacy
has
AN AH I ST
New Cold Remedy
PENDLETON
HEPPNER FREIGHT LINE
Arrives at Heppner,
Lexington and Ion
MONDAY
WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY
Tor Pickup or
Delivery
Tor pickup, call
Red & White. Heppner
Padberg Tractor, Lex,
Omar Rietmann, lone
Oliver B
International 9
Caterpillar 4
AC 5
FULLY GUARANTEED
Moon Equipment Co.
Wasco, Oregon
Phone 322
Dance
at
Lexington
Grange
Saturday
Feb. 18
Music by
nuns
Supper will be
served
ADMISSION
$1.25 per person
To Our Customers:
All electric service in Heppner will be off
from 5:45 a. m. until 8:45 a. m.
Sunday morning February 19
This interruption is necessary to connect distribution
lines to our new substation at Jordan.
Pacific Power and Light Co.
We Are
7
i
V I
o o
To Our Customers and the Public :
The Heppner Cleaners will be closed at the present lo
cation Thursday, February 23, at which time the
equipment will be moved to our fine new building. It
is expected that the moving will be accomplished in
four days and that we will again be open to the public
Monday, February 27
During the moving process, the office will be kept
open at our present location to receive garments for
cleaning and to deliver garments already cleaned.
We invite your cooperation until we are all set up in
the new building, when we will be prepared to give you
better service than ever.
Sincerely,
II
E P P fl E R
c
LEAKERS
W. C. Collins
Phone 2592
Heppner. Oregon