Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, May 18, 1950, Section B, Page Page 8, Image 8

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Women's Auxiliary of All Saints Church Lays
Plans For Annual Birthday Party on June 2
RUTH F. PAYNE
Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, May 18, 1950
The annual birthday party of
the Women's Auxiliary of All
Saints Episcopal Church will be
held on the afternoon of June
2 according to plans made at
the regular meeting of the group
at the Parish house on Thursday
afternoon. Mrs. M. R. Wightman,
Mrs. V. O. Dix, Mrs. J. C. Payne,
Mrs. J. G. Thomson, Mrs. Ture
Peterson and Mrs. R. B. Rice will
be hostesses for the affair which
will be a tea and cards. This
will be the last major social
event before closing for the sum
mer months and invitations are
Deing extended to members and
friends. At this meeting also,
Mrs. W. O. Dix was appointed
chairman of Christian Social Re
lations and Mrs. Frank Wilkin
son will act as church periodi
cals chairman for the remainder
of the year. Mrs. Wightman and
Mrs. Rice, delegates to the re
cently held convocation at Burns,
gave a resume of their trip.
Hostesses for the afternoon were
Mrs. Dix and Mrs. L. E. Bisbee.
One of the most outstanding
social events of the week end
was the Mother-Daughter ban
quet Saturday evening at the
Oddfellows hall given under the
sponsorship of the Triple Links
club. Mrs. John Bergstrom, presi
dent of the club acted as mis
tress of ceremonies and intro
duced the guest speaker, Mrs.
Clara B. Gertson, who gave the
history and meaning of Mother's
Day. Darlene Howell sang two
numbers, "Mother Machree" and
"Ave Maria" accompanied by
Miss Virginia Bender. The tables
were beautifully decorated with
bouquets of tulips in pastel
shades and pale pink tapers. The
club plans to make the Mother
Daughter banquet an annual
event and members are already
looking forward to a bigger and
more impressive affair for next
year.
Sunday guests of Mrs. Alena
Anderson were Miss Lois Martin
and Elton Parmen of Freewater.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
A. J. Chaffee were Mr. and Mrs.
H. M. Ruth and daughters, Shir
ley and Ruby of Kennewick. Mr.
Ruth is a brother of Mrs. Chaffee.
Mrs. Clara Gertson, Mrs. Ellis
Saling and Mrs. A. J. Chaffee en
tertained the Carnation club
Thursday evening at the Gertson
home on South Main street.
Present were Mesdames Creston
Robinson, John Farra, Durward
Tash, John Bergstrom, Dorothy
Applegate and Merle Burkenbine.
Games were played with Mrs.
Bergstrom receiving high score
for the evening. Refreshments
were served.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Isom of Helix
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J.
W. Farra during the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Chaffee left
Sunday for Astoria where they
will attend the sessions of the
Grand Lodge I.O.O.F. and Re
bekah Assembly of Oregon which
are meeting there this week
Following the convention, the
Chaffees will drive on down the
coast for a brief vacation before
returning to Heppner.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Case were Mr. ajid
Mrs. carl Leatners 01 .Portland
Mrs. Alena Anderson and daugh.
ters drove over from Pendleton
Saturday afternoon to visit Mrs
Adelia Anderson who is a pa
tient at St. Anothony's hospital.
Clarence Smith of Pendleton
was a business visitor in Hepp
ner Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ewing Hynd and
Jack Hynd, Jr. of Cecil were shop
ping in Heppner Monday.
Mrs. Dan Barlow who has been
ill at the home of her daughter,
Mrs. Albert Schunk for several
weeks was taken to her home in
the Eightmile district by ambu
lance Monday afternoon.
Wate Crawford, farmer of the
lone section, was a business visi
tor In Heppner Tuesday.
Mrs. Henry Aiken and Mrs.
Josie Jones returned the first of
the week from Portland and
Seaside where they spent a week
visiting relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. William Schwarz
and three sons of The Dalles
spent Sunday here visiting with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Schwarz.
Mesdames Harold Cohn, Ray
mond Ferguson and Phillip Ma-
, honey motored to Walla Walla
Tuesday to spend tne aay snop-
ping.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Blake de
parted the first of the week for
Augusta, Kansas where they will
visit their son-in-law and daugh
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sing
er and make the acquaintance of
their new grandson, Stephen
Earl. They expect to be gone
about a month and en route
home will stop over in Roggen,
Colorado to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Gilliam.
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Burkenbine
and family have returned from
Kansas where they spent two
weeks visiting with her relatives.
Dr. and Mrs. A. u. McMurao
and Dr. and Mrs. Richard
Portland.
J. Im million dollars worth of pro
O'Shea drove to Pendleton Tues-1 jects were on the drawing boards
dav pvpninp to attend the meet-' r u .iti;'. ornhitonta and huild-
' -C3 - 7" U1 111'.. 111! a HIVlliiw.iu "
ing oi me umauua voumy lvieu
ical Association and Auxiliary.
Louis Barclay received a
broken bone in his left hand
while at work at the local lumber
yard the last of the week.
daughter, Joanne, were in from
Camp 5 Tuesday looking after
business matters in Heppner,
HEAVY BUILDING CITED
"Thp huildinu needs of rapid-
i lv trrowine Oregon are in the
neighborhood of $100,000,000 a
year." Thomas Lawson McCall,
administrative assistant to Gov
ernor Douglas McKay, stated at
the capitol Monday.
McCall recently completed a
survey of building prospects in
wnere ne iouna sume
prs rlamorine for plans.
Public expenditures planned
for expansion" of state institu
tions surrounding Salem and
throughout the state will total
some 20 million dollars during
Mrs. Charles Shannon and the next few years.
national REA
FLAX COMEBACK
Only one-half of the land in
the Willamette valley that has
Here from lone the first of the ' been producing flax for the past
week were Mrs. C. W. Swanson. few vears will be seeded this
Mrs. J. P. O'Meara and her moth.
er, Mrs. Reith, and Mrs. Jack
Farris.
Mr. and Mrs. Riley Munkers
and family were up from Arling
ton to spend the week end with
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Munkers.
Sunday, the gentlemen of
family did a bit of fishing. j
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Becket
made a business trip to Hermis-
ton Saturday.
Several social functions were
held during the week end hon
oring members of the graduating
class of 1950. Friday evening,
members of the senior class were
guests at the annual Junior-
Senior banquet at the parish
nouse. inis was followed bv the
Junior Prom for which the gym-
auununura was transiormea into
a garden scene where students,
faculty and alumni danced to
wonderful music under a canopy
of stars.
Mrs. Jeanne Dobbs has an
nounced the formal ooenine of
her beauty shop in its new loca
tion in the building formerly oc
cupied by the Heppner Cleaners
on Main street. This will be in
the form of a tea and is to hp
held Friday May 19. The interior
has been completely redone with
the reception room in knotty pine
and the walls and ceiling of the
workroom painted white with
touches ot sunshine vellow for
color interest. A little over half
of the building is to be occupied
Dy ine oeauty snop and the other
part will be used by another
tenant. Assisting at the tea will
De Mrs. Dobbs mother,
year. This land is rated as equal
to the finest flax land in the
world.
Budget director Harry Dorman
suggests an invoice of stock on
hand by the 14 mills in Oregon
and the appointment of a profes-
theisional salesman to manage the
I pool.
NEW FORESTRY LAWS
Representative Oregon timber
men met at the state forestry
department in Salem on Monday
and drafted a new set of laws
relating to spruce bud worm con
trol to be submitted to the 1951
legislature.
The group was divided on the
matter of financing the control
work. Two plans will be submit
ted. The first would establish
a severence tax assessed on the
annual cut of timber. The second
would establish zones of infesta
tion and tax lands in the zones
where the control work was done,
The state forestry department
estimates there are 2,500,000 acres
of timber lands in the state that
are infested with spruce worm.
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
Incredible as it seems, Oregon
stands second in rural electnfi
cation, according to information
received by George Flagg, state
public service commissioner, from
Claude Wlckard
administrator.
Ohio is first with 99.4 per cent
of the rural homes electrified
and Oregon is a close second
with 99.3 per cent.
Extension of Bonneville power
lines into the rural sections of
the state has been responsible
for the large number of farm
homes now furnished with elec
tricity. Flagg said.
POLITICAL SPECULATION
Here's what the coffee clutchers
around the capitol think of the
top primary election candidates.
"They kept Deadwood Dave on
the farm too long. The hush and
hurry campaign cramps his
style."
"Win or lose, the Hoover back
ers have obtained their objec
tives in a measure. Wayne
Morse has been forced by politi
cal expediency to temper his
stand on several measures,
which his forthrightness
brought him both acclaim
criticism."
'The primary campaign
crystallized the opinions of many
voters against Senator Wayne
Morse. The anti-Morse group
activities and the heavy demo
cratic registration furnish a
signal threat to Oregon's junior
senator at the November general
election."
GOVERNOR TRAVELS
Governor Douglas McKay flew
to Pendleton Monday to welcome
the Liberty Bell to the state. He
missed out on a chance to wel
come the president last week
and said he had to be content
with greeting the national bell
shrine.
The povernor officially opened
the state Independence Bond I
drive at Pendleton Monday. The
Liberty Bell will be enshrined
at Portland until July 4th but
will make a tour of the state in
the meantime.
ARMED FORCES DEFENDED
Admiral H. H. Goode,, speak
ing in Salem Monday, likened
the military of the nation to the
bark of a tree, a protective neces
sity. An idealistic peace in . a
world of animal instincts is im
possible, was the trend of his
remarks.
Admiral Goode selected Salem
from among a list of 50 North
west cities as one of his stops
in a nation-wiae tour.
r-- - - - m
five states of the region, John S
Barnes of California, R. Neal
Irving of Idaho; George Harman
of Nevada. Sam L. Sloan of Ore
gon, and Paul C. McGrew of
Washington. Thev were toured
ovpi- the district bv Thomas Hel
Mrs. icpth Ppnriipton district ronser
uaude Huston of Eightmile and vationist and Thomas I. Wilson,
Mrs. Aaeiie Hannan. work unit conservationist.
Here for an official inspection Mrs. Grace Nickerson motored
of the Heppner District Tuesday to Arlington Thursday evening to
were J. n. Lnnst, Portland, re-(attend tne eignin graae graaua
gional director of the Soil Con-ition exercises. Karen Hayes,
servation Service accompanied 1 granddaughter of Mrs. Nickerson,
by state conservationists from is a member of the class.
in
last
21 Persons Died In
Traffic Accidents
Twenty-one persons died
Oregon traffic accidents
montn accoraing to preliminary
figures based on all fatality re
ports received to date, Secretary
of State Earl T. Newbry reported
today.
April traffic a year ago claim
ed 24 lives.
The state's traffic deaths thus
far this year stand at 79, com
pared with 74 at the same time
in 1949. All but three of last
month s tatauties resulted
accidents taking place in
areas.
Newbry warned that heavy
highway travel expected in the
months ahead may bring about
more lost ground in the effort
to improve Oregon's traffic death
record. He said an upsurge in
fatal mishaps is noted each
summer, most of them high
speed, open -highway accidents.
GOES TO GRAND LODGE
Rev. J. Palmer Sorlien is in
Astoria this week attending the
anual meeting of the I.O.O.F. of
from i Oregon. Rev. Sorlien has served
rural the order as grand chaplain for
'the year just ended.
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Ferguson
announce the forthcoming wed
ding in early June of their daugh
ter Marylou to Mr. Robert C.
Kelly of Elmira, California. Mr.
Kelly finished his course in ge
ology at Oregon State college in
March. He is the son of Mrs.
Meta M. Prignitz of Davenport,
Iowa and Albert C. Kelly of El
mira, California. Miss Ferguson,
who has been visiting in Pasa
dena the past 10 days is expected
to return to Heppner at the end of
the week.
I
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AiT
CLASSfa
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Honor our young men and women
upon an important Milestone in their lives.
BEAUTIFUL USEFUL GIFTS FOR HIM
AND HER AS THEY GRADUATE
HUMPHREYS DRUG CO.
THE REXALL STORE
PENDLETON
HEPPNER FREIGHT LINE
Arrives at Heppner,
Lexington and lone
MONDAY
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FRIDAY
For Pickup or
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For pickup, call
Red White, Heppner
Padberg Tractor, Lex.
Omar Rietmann, lone
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d latest issue. Before and after pictures
...the complete treatment. Ever since
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pored over home magazines, clipping
and saving remodeling ideas.. .and hoping.
But hardly dreaming our place could
be so pretty this oo...with a Home
Improvement Loan from the bank.
Why, if it hadn't been for this pay-as-yoir-go
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FD0S57 NATIONAL DANK
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FORTY YEARS AGO rugs were beaten in a
cloud of dust. Housework was full of backbreak-
ing drudgery. Electrical appliances were few and crude.
Electric service was expensive, and, in many communities,
i ii i
not very aepenaaDie.
T - r
tsaft 1910
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1QCA PROGRESS toward electric living in the years since
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the miracles of the American enterprise system. Today, low-cost
electricity does a dozen household chores in less time than it took
grandmother to clean one rug.
Progressive American business keeps bringing you
belter electric living.,. at bargain electric rates!
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