Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, January 18, 1951, Page Page 6, Image 6

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    Page 6
Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, January 18, 1951
CHURCHES
METHODIST CHURCH
J. Palmer Sorlien, Minister.
Morning worship and sermon
at 11 a. m. Sermon topic 'The
Mystic Touch". Special music by
the choir, Oliver Creswick, dir
ector. Sunday Church school at 9:45
a. m. A class for every age, Ad
ult Bible class, also Youth Fel
lowship class at this same hour.
Always welcome.
Mid-week devotional service
at 7 p. m. on Thursday at the
church.
Thursday choir practice at 7:30
p. m.
VVomans Society of Christian
Service meets the first Wednes
day of each month at 8 p. m.
Suzanna Wesley Circle of the
Womans Society of Christian
Service meets the third Wednes
day of each month at 2 p. m.
Tele-fun
Youth for Christ at the High
school assembly at 7:30 p. m.
January 29.
Special service on "Global
Christianity" at 6:30 p. m. Jan
uary 30. Pot luck dinner. The
Rev. Myron M. Hall will be our
guest speaker. Everyone wel
come. CHURCH OF CHRIST
R, J. McKowen, Pastor
Sunday services: 9:45 a. m.,
Bible school, with classes for all;
C. W. Barlow, superintendent.
11 a. m., morning worship and
communion. Young people's fel
lowship, 6 p. m. followed by de
votional service at 6:30, led by
Robert Walker. At the evening
service, 7:30 p. m., an outstand
ing sound motion picture film,
"The Power of God," will be
shown.
Thursday, 7 p. m., choir prac
tice, followed by Bible study and
prayer meeting at 8 o'clock.
ALL SAINTS MEMORIAL
CHURCH Episcopal
Holy Communion, 8.
Church school 9:45.
Morning prayer and sermon,
11.
Wednesdays, Holy Commun
ion at 10.
"It's easy to answer prompt
ly! When the phone rings
lust make a bee line for it!"
.. .You won't miss receiving im
portant calls if you always
answer promptly . . . Pacific
Telephone.
PENDLETON
HEPPNER FREIGHT LINE
Arrives at Heppner,
Lexington and lone
EVERY DAY
For Pickup or
Delivery
For pickup, call
Red & White, Heppner
Padberg Tractor, Lex.
Omar Rletmann, lone
Connecting Carrier for
Consolidated Freightways
Choir practices:
Wednesdays Boys, from 2:30
to 4. Girls. 4 to 5.
Adult choir, Thursday evening
at 8.
Boy Scouts, Wednesday eve
ning 7:30 to 9.
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Pastor Shelby E. Graves
Remember you cannot buy
your way into heaven or your
..ay out of hell. There is only
one way to heaven and that is
through the blood of Christ.
Take His way and believe the
Gospel.
Sunday, 9:45 a. m., Sunday
school. An interesting class for
every age.
11 a. m. worship hour.
7 p. m. singspiration.
7:45 p. m. evangelistic serv.
ice.
Evangelist McGaffee will be
preaching for us this Sunday.
Tuesday 7:45 p. m. Cottage
prayer meeting in lone.
Thursday 7:45 p. m. Bible
study and prayer meeting. John
14:14.
County Agent News . .
4-H Club member Larry Mc
Kenzie, 12 years old, is giving
inspiration for the March of
Dimes campaign this month as
the boy appearing on posters.
Larry, a member of the Orleans
County New York 4-H Club
carries rabbit and garden proj
ects. Courage, grit and help
from the National Foundation
for Infantile Paralysis have put
Larry McKenzie back in 4-H cir
culation again.
Oregon 4-H club boys and
girls raised over 1300 pheasants
for the Fish and Game Service in
1950, reports Burton Hutton,
State 4-H Agent at Oregon State
College. The rest of the 70,000
birds that were released, in the
state last year were produced on
game farms at Corvallis, Eugene
Hermiston and Ontario. The
farm youth were supplied with
the eggs which they hatched
and cared for until the birds I
What's Doing
Continued from page one
to make petitions circulate in
each congressional district in
stead of getting names around
the crowded market place.
Groups that habitually put bills
on the ballot by initiative oppose
this plan as they want the city
tail to wag the state dog. These
are the tax spending groups, la.
bor and its sattelite farm groups.
Information given out by of
ficials is that a big. 72,000 gross,
truck making the 338 mile run
from the Columbia to California
pays the state $18.55. An average
car would pay the state in taxes
$1.26. The truck weighs 24 times
as much as the car so is taxed
at about half as much per mile.
My, my, what you can't learn by
asking questions.
Nobody very happy about pro
posal to spend millions for bomb
shelters. Most would rather live
like a man than die like a mole.
were old enough to be freed, at
about eight weeks. A member of
the game commission then in
spected the pheasants- and su
pervised their release. The
4-H'ers received a fee for each
bird they raised to cover their
expenses and to encourage this
activity. Leroy Brenner, lone,
and Eddie Brosnan, Heppner,
were 4-H members in Morrow
County carrying Pheasant proj
ects. Hutton suggests that any
club member who would like to
raise pheasants for the Commis
sion in 1951 see his county ex
tension agent for details,
o
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Rosewall
returned Wednesday from a two
weeks trip to Miami, Fla., where
they attended a Ford Motor Co.
salesmen's and executives con
vention, as well as enjoying the
salubrious climate of that famed
spot. Emery Gentry drove to Ar
lington to meet them.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hasvold
are rejoicing over the birth of a
baby girl Sunday, January 14 at
the Pioneer Memorial hospital.
They now have three girls.
fr p8&; w 022Z2z- itbv 7S$& I 1 f u 1 7
Ford makes the truck news of the f 4 AO WM-'M M X V Mi I ! 1 J
M See, try the new Ford - ZMl'fL f. : & tH 111 P 41 Ul
Tricks for 51, and you will find M2 i-TT&md W WB& ' S MHtHiV
a wealth of step-ahead engineer- dT I K v. T "tWV- Wt 1 V I MlJlJ
lng advancements. Better looks S Vo"o - - CT'VtWKP f k 3 I ISA'
with modern, new front end and 1 ltmm fmmmmm. ' w TOgj '4rIJAAIjfl
itxterior styling. A still wider U " 7 V ''"T fjOl' i aSk ILL T! $2 H
choice, over 180 models for any I gwiimiOTrmrm terfjl fS4j KfrAJ fsfjj Vit
kind of job. More comfort for 'y-TH1 fm7 i AJWW$l Rtri ill
m liJ WlMW ' Choose from over 180 new Ford Truck
ffl tW 2W models, from 95-h.p. Pickups to 145-h.p. BIO .
M V JOBS like this. You can choose a V-8 or Six.
feature POWER
Rainmakers Form
National Group
At Denver Meeting
Mark Twain's "everyone talks
about the weather, but no one
does anything about it" was vir
tually as outmoded last week as
Old Dobbin compared to the
modern diesel tractor, when rep
resentatives of 13 "rainmaking"
organizations from scattered
parts of western United States
met to discuss problems in gen
eral. The meeting, held in Den
ver, Col. was attended by Ralph
Crum, lone, and George Wilson,
Kent, president and vice presid
ent, respectively of the Tri-coun-ty
Weather Research Corpora
tion. Farmers and ranchers who at
tended this first gathering of its
kind, represented more than 60
million acres of land badly in
need of increased moisture.
States represented included Col
orado, Wyoming, New Mexico,
Washington, California and Or
egon. Elected to the office of presi
dent was Hervey Harris, Sterling,
Col.; Oliver Dilling, Connell,
Wash., was elected vice-president;
Glen Sanders, Denver, treas
urer and Jim Wilson, Fort Col
lins, Col., secretary. Directors
elected were Leo Horrigan, Pros
ser, Wash., Ralph Crum, lone,
Ore.; Joseph Webber, Plattes
ville, Col.; Charles Butler, Car
penter, Wyo.; Murray Giffin,
Nunn, Col.; Dave Currulli, Pueb
lo, Col. and Albert Mitchell, Al
bert,, New Mexico.
Speaking before the group, Dr.
Irving P. Krick, American Insti
tute of Aerological Research,
Pasadena, California,, stressed
the need for greater understand
ing by the general public of the
processes involved in cloud
seeding.
o
EXAMINER COMING
A drivers license examiner
will be on duty between the
hours of 10 a. m. and 4 p. m.
Tuesday, Jan. 23, at the city hall
in Heppner. Persons wishing li
censes or permits to drive are
asked to get in touch with the
examiner well ahead of the
scheduled closing hour in order
to assure completion of their ap
plications with a minimum of
delay.
Mrs. Henry Schwarz who has
been a patient at the Pioneer
Memorial hospital for a week is
reported slowly improving.
New half-tonners have easy
new steering column gearshift.
; New wider vision in all cabs,
, 60 more rear view. four
f speed bynchro-silent trans
mission available at extra cost in
Series F-4, F-5 and F-6. New
CHROME-PLATED TOP PISTON
rings now standard in all four
Ford Truck engines.
PILOT ECONOMY
Everybody knows Ford Trucks
tost longer, which means economy
for years ahead. Everybody
knows Ford power can pack more
ton-miles into a working day, on
good roads or bad. Now Ford
tep-ahead engineering gives you
more strength reserves, more
time on the job, less time in the
iliop.
The Ford Truck
Power Pilot ia a
simpler, fully-proven '
way of getting the
most power from the least gas. The
Power Pilot automatically meters and
fires the right amount of gas, at pre
cisely the right instant, to match con
stantly changing speed, load and
power requirements.
Unlike conventional systems, the
Power Pilot uses only one control
instead of two, yet is designed to
synchronize firing twice as accurately.
You can use regular gas . . . you get
no-knock performance. Only Ford in
the low-price field gives you Power
Pilot Economyl
Ford Trucks cut your expenses'
through low initial cost, low fueV(
consumption, minimum maintenance,
longer life.
Come in today to
get ALL the facts
on the Economy
Leaders for 1951.
Ford Trucking Costs Less because-
FORD TRUCKS LAST LONGER
tJ.A.T.
Using laltil nghtratloH data ,
6,592,000 (ruclri, lih niuronc
prti prov fori frecli' Mv
longtn
Rosewall Motor. Co.
A. E. Glidewell
Public Accountant
and
Tax Consultant
At Hotel Heppner every
Thursday
Office in Lobby Hours 9-6
Business & Farm Account
ing .. . Income and Payroll
Taxes . . . Financial State
ments & Auditing
Representing
Fritzke Accounting Service
244 Main St. : Phone 6441
Hermiston, Oregon
State J-C Prexy
Visits Local Unit
Byron Henry of Enterprise,
state president of the Junior
chamber of commerce, addressed
40 Jaycees and Jay Cee-ettes at
the club rooms in the old fair
pavilion Wednesday evening,
the occasion being the annual
get acquainted meeting sponsor,
ed by the two groups. Following
the dinner, games were played.
Mrs. Dick Meador and Mrs.
Bill Barratt were in charge of
arrangements.
Mrs. Henry accompanied her
husband the the state vice pres
ident, Bill Hansen of Pendleton
also was present.
Annual election of officers by
the Jay Cee-ettes and Mrs. Lew
is Cason's regularly scheduled
talk on the pre-school child will
be the program for next Wed
nesday evening.
o
Van Marter Signs
Up Outside Teams
Two treats are in store for. lo
cal basketball fans in the next
week and a half it has been an.
nounced by La Verne Van Marter,
manager of the Heppner Sham
rocks. Saturday night, January 27, the
Shamrocks will entertain the
Pendleton Motor Inn team in a
March of Dimes benefit game.
The Motor Inn team, composed
partially of Pendleton Indians, is
currently tied for first place in
the Pendleton league.
Thursday night, Feb. 1, the
Shamrocks will meet the famous
Harlem Globe Trotterettes, color
ed women's world basketball
champions.
o
Condon Teams Win
By Narrow Margins
Condon was on the long end
of two narrow margin victories
Friday night when the Gilliam
county boys met the A and B
squads from lone. The A squad
won from lone 47-46 while the B
squad tiimmed the Cardinal ju
niors 40 to 39.
McLaughlin, with 20 points,
was high man of the evening,
Bristow of lone crowding him
closely with 18.
o
Norman Bleakman, son of
Percy Bleakman, is now in Camp
Gordon, Ga., according to Mrs.
Bert Bleakman, his grandmoth
er. Norman's wife, who graduat
ed Sunday from University of
Oregon as a laboratory techni
cian, is joining her husband Jan
uary 20.
Keith Marshall of Roseburg
and J. D. Campbell of the Camp
bell Rock Wool company of Sa
lem, were business visitors in
Heppner over the weekend.
Marshall is the son-in-law of
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hughes and is
on the coaching staff of Rose
burg high school.
Mrs. O. H. Bengston of Med
ford is visiting at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Benge. Her husband is a mem
ber of the house from Jackson
county.
Mrs. Mable . Burkenbine re
ceived word Tuesday that her
brother-in-law, Sherman Burk
enbine, was instantly killed in
an automobile accident at Cen
tralia, Wash. Monday night. No
other details were contained in
the message. Mrs. Burkenbine
and son Loyd left Wednesday
morning for Centralia to attend
the funeral.
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Ferguson
returned last Thursday from
Norfolk, Va. where they spent
about six weeks with their
daughter and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Kelly. They report
an enjoyable trip and a wonder,
ful visit.
Dick Bloom, who has been
working off and on for several
years for the Condon Globe
Times, has joined the Gazette
Times print shop staff.
Transferring &
Heavy Hauling
Padded Moving
Vans
Storage
Warehouse
U.PandN.P.
Penland Bros.
Transfer Co.
39 SW Dorion Avenue
Phone 338
Pendleton, Ore.
SURPRISE!
Everyone is going to Claudien's
Saturday and Monday for a
Great Big Surprise Sale
BETTER JOIN THE CROWD -
Bargains You Will Grab
Don't Miss this Opportunity . . .
Claucli
ten &
STAR CD REPORTER
Admission prices afternoon and evening, onleai upeolfioally advert lied to be otherwise Children I
Est. Price .17, Fed. Tax .03, TOTA1 20o; Grade and High School Student. U yean and overt Eat
Price .40, Fed. Tax. .10, TOTAL 60o; Adnlt.i Est. Price .SO, Ped. Tax .10, TOTAL 90a Every Child
oconpytntr a seat mast have ticket.
Sunday shows continuous from 1 p m. Phone 1472 for starting time of the dlf
ferent shows. All programs except Sunday start at 7r30 p. m.
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.. January 18-19-20
Davey Crocket, Indian Scout
George Montgomery. Ellen Drew, Phillip
Reed. Noah Beery Jr., Paul Guilfoyle
Spectacle, action and scenic backgrounds
abound in this pioneer story.
PLUS
Bomba On The Lost Volcano
New, exciting adventure for Bomba, the
Jungle Boy.
Sunday-Monday, January 21-22
TO PLEASE A LADY
Clark Gable, Barbara Stanwyck, Adolphe
Menjou, Will Geer, Ted Husing
Roaring romance of a racing roughneck!
Thrill to Chitwood's Hell Drivers ... their
first appearance in a feature picture.
ALSO: High school, college and profes
sional teams provide the action in SHOOT
THE BASKET, featuring George Mikan,
selected as the best basketball player of
the past 50 years; Disney cartoon in
Technicolor; late NEWSREEL.
Tuesday-Wednesday, January 23-24
BRIGHT LEAF
Gary Cooper, Lauren Bacall, Patricia
Neal, Jack Carson, Donald Crisp, Gla
dys George, Jeff Corey, Taylor Holmes,
Elizabeth Patterson
The dramatic, stirring story of a man's
rocket-like rise to wealth and power and
his plummeting descent. Lavishly pro
duced from the novel by Foster FitzSim-
Thursday-Friday-Saturday, Jan. 2S-26-27
DEPUTY MARSHAL
Jon Hall, Frances Langford, Dick Foran,
Julie Bishop, Joe Sawyer, Russell Hay
den Clem Bevans
Rugged outdoor adventure with touches
of music and comedy.
PLUS
SQUARE DANCE KATY
Vera Vague, Phil Brito, Virginia Welles,
Sheila Ryan, Jimmie Davis and his
Sunshine Band
Square dancing from the hills to the city
night spots with humor, music and slap
stick action.