Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, July 19, 1951
Page 3
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Parties and Lunches
Held by lone Residents
By Echo Palmateer,
Mrs. Delmer Crawford gave a
birthday party in honor of her
daughter, Marlene's first birth
day, July 12. Those present were:
Mrs. Rodney Crawford Jr. and
daughter, Nancy Jean of Port
land; Mrs. Jack Healy . and
daughter, Jean Marie, of Hepp
ner; Mrs. Ted Palmateer and
children, Janet and Ronald; Mrs.
Ernest McCabe and daughter,
Pamela; Mrs. Wallace Matthews
and daughters, Denice and Ber
nice; Mr. Berl Akers and children,
Billie anil Bonnie Kaye; Mrs.
Milton Morgan and children,
Marilyn and Gary; Mrs. Petty
john and son, Earl James; Mrs.
Harold Snider and daughter,
Janice; Mrs. Donald Peterson and
son, Kerry; Mrs. Tad Miller and
Miss Ruby Ann Rietmann. Miss
Rietmann assisted with the party.
Ice cream and cake were served.
Mrs. Franklin Ely spent the
week end at her home here. She
is attending summer school in
Portland.
Clifford Yamell and daughters
of Vancouver and Peter Manson
of Newberg were guests at the
Harry Yamell last week.
Lyle Allyn of Oakland, Califor
nia is spending his vacation her
vesting at the Raymond Lundell
ranch.
Mrs. Henry Clark is a patient at
the Pioneer Memorial hospital
in Heppner.
The lone Garden Club enjoyed
a garden tour Tuesday of last
IlllPllMillMillM llllll1 llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli
UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP
Union Oil Service
3rd and Dorian Streets Pendleton
Now Under the Ownership of
Raymond Pettyjohn
HEPPNER
We have purchased the station from Guy Wyrick and
extend an invitation to his former customers to visit us
for the same fine service as before. We also will wel
come all our Morrow county friends when in Pendleton.
- Union 76 and 7600 Gasoline
- Expert Lubrication
- Car Washing Service
mil
week. They first visited the Dix
on SSmith home in the country,
then came to town and looked
at the gardens there. They had
a pot luck lunch in Mrs. Fannie
Griffith's yard. In the afternoon
they visited the lovely yards of
Lee Beckners, G. Hermann and
Marion Palmer.
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Beckner
of Elkhorn, West Virginia and
Norman Beckner of Bluefield,
West Virginia are visiting at the
Lee Beckner home. Oliver Beck
ner is a brother end Norman Is
a nephew of Lee Beckner.
The Matanatha Club met at
the home of Mrs. Echo Palma
teer Wednesday of last week with
Mrs. Gordon White as co-hostess.
The club purchased material for
edging on their tables. They also
set October 13 as the date for
their dinner and , bazaar. Mrs.
Ralph Crum won the door prize.
The lone Farm Bureau Center
met at the home of Earl McKin
ney June 11. Henry Baker and
Orville Cutsforth gave a report
on their tour through Canada in
June. The trip was sponsored by
the Wheat League and the wheat
commission. They studied the
farming conditions there. They
went by plane and flew as far
north as Edmonton. There is
much spring wheat and cattle
being raised in Alberta and the
men were impressed by the lux
urius grass and the lakes there.
After the Weiihg refreshments
were served by Mrs. McKinney.
The next meeting August 8 will
be at the home of Mrs. Echo
Palmateer.
Mrs. Sadie Olson of Spokane
is visiting at the home of her
brother, H. O. Ely at Morgan.
Funeral services were held for
Mrs. Marjofie Wimer in Yakima,
Washington, July 12. Mrs. Wimer
was born October 17, 1917 in
lone and died July 10 in Yakima.
Interment was in t he Tahoma
cemetery in Yakima.
' She is survived by her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Holmes Holman;
her husband Clayton and two
small daughters. She is a niece
of Mrs. Ida Grabill. Those attend,
ing the funeral from here were
II ytr- jm . v 9Il..fl.; j
Telephone service is always homemade, in and for each community we serve. Here a cable goes into service.
MORE HOME-TOWN SERVICE FOR WEST'S HOME TOWNS
We're putting many millions more into telephone facilities this year
lit!
1. All across the West, in the country and in the
cities, telephone people are still hard at it expanding
and improving the telephone system. For our popu
lation continues to grow. The demand for new tele
phone service goes right on ... in spite of our having
doubled the number of telephones in use in the
past ten years. And doubling the amount of money
invested in the telephone business in just five years.
3. It's taken a tremendous investment to build to
serve the million and a half new telephones we've
added since 1943. And, building as we have in the
face of inflated costs, the equipment to serve" a new
telephone has averaged about 400. Before 1940, the
average was about (230. Yet rates are up far less than
our costs of providing service., .on the average less
than half as much as the cost of living. Your telephone
is one of your budget's best friends. '
...
2. New facilities, installed in just the past five years
have increased our plant $660,000,000, the largest
expansion program ever executed by any public utility
operating company. Again in 1951, we'll put many
millions of investors' money into the West. Much of
the material we will use will be purchased in the
West's towns and cities. Certainly most of them will
benefit from the program's jobs and payrolls.
Pacific Telephone
Price increases since 1940
FOOD UP
138
COST OF
IIVIN8
UP 4ft
X U"1 i ONLY 28'
AVtMGf
TELEPHONE
MTES UP
IN lUfdlom Wi UKil
Your telephone is one of
today's best bargains
Boy Injured by
Bullet at Boardman
. By Mrs. Flossie Coats
Boardman Lannie Eugene
Martin ten year old lad of Eu
gene, Oregon was shot Thursday
evening while playing with his
young brother - Max Moore, at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Esler
Moore, In Boardman. The two
boys were playing together in
the bathroom with a twenty-two
rifle. The bullet entered the body
just below the heart, going on
through. Lannie was rushed to
the St. Anthonys hospital in Pend
leton. He is reported to be doing
nicely.
Nels Krlstensen had the mis
fortune to lose approximately
twenty-five tons of alfalfa hay
on his farm Thursday evening.
Kritensen had stacked the new
crop of hay which apparently
caused combustion.
Gene Riley of Hood River Is
spending the summer at 'Toms
Camp" and assisting his uncle
Mr. Andrew Vannoy.
Pendleton callers Thursday
were Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Ewing,
Mr. Max Deweese and Mrs.
Olive Atteberry.
Mr. Z. J. Gillespie and father,
Ed Gillespie motored to The
Dalles Saturday bringing Mrs.
Gillespie home who had been a
patient at The Dalles General
hospital through the week.
Mrs. Glenn Macken arrived
Thusday and is again at the
home of Mrs. Anna Cramer.
David Cole left Saturday for a
two months stay with a brother,
Ruben Cole, Elmira, Oregon and
also with a sister, Mrs. Rose
Kelly, Anahiem, California.
Mrs. Leon Wright and son and
daughter, Barbara Eades, St.
Helens, spent the week end at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eades
and other relatives. Barbara is
a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eades.
Mr. Grabill, Mr. and Mrs. E. W.
Bristow, Mrs. Carl Bergstrom and
Mrs. Wm. Bergstrom.
Linda Hams, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. La Verne Hams and
Wayne Hams, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Vester Hams, were lost for
two hours in the mountains near
Hardman Sunday morning. Most
of the residents of Hardman were
out looking for them. They had
Continued on Page 6
Martin Shattuck spent the past
week with his mother, Mrs. Low
ell Shattuck in Pendleton.
Mr. and MrsArnln Hug and
daughters, Wilma and Wanda
motored to Mt" Rainier Sunday
for a picnic with their son Dale
Hug who is working at Boeings,
Seattle.
Mr. and Mrs. I. T. Pearson, Mrs.
Willis Pieratt and son Gary pic
nicked at Bonneville Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Macomber
and grandson Gary Petteys,
Pendleton motored to Salem Sat
urday and attended the Board
man Community former resi
dents get-to-gether at Corvallis
on Sunday; Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Macomber and son Lee, Arling
ton accompanied the former.
Mr. Jim Whitmire, Grants Pass
arrived Tuesday for a visit with
her mother, Mrs. Olive Atteberry.
Mrs. Ed Kunze left Monday for
Portland to visit her sons and
daughter, and families, Mr. and
Mrs. Ed McClellen, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Kunze, also Mr. and Mrs.
Ervin Flock.
Mrs. Roy Marlow and children
also Jackie Burnett, Irrigon were
guests Saturday at the Frank
Marlows.
Mrs. Claud Clats and Mrs.
Frank Marlow motored to Pend
leton Monday.
Several members and three vi
sitors attended the H.E.C. meet
ing at the Mrs. Hugh Brown
home Wednesday a f t e r n o on.
Plans were made for the forth
coming Pomona which will be at
Greenfield Grange in September.
Mrs. Will Forthman and Mrs. Ed
Kunze were co-hostesses.
Transferring fir
Heavy Hauling
Padded Mtving
Vans
Storage
Warehouse
U. P and N. P.
Penland Bros.
Transfer Co.
39 SW Dorlon Avenue
Phone 338
Pendleton, Ore.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Barlow ' on west Willow street. Barlow is
have moved into their new home - county clerk.
GONTY'S
25 ff
ALL SUMMER
mi
Women's
Children's
And, A Few Pairs of Men's ,
SANDALS - OXFORDS - PLAY SHOES
Regular $2.50 to $10.95
Now - Reduced 25
Gonty's
For the Morrow County
Fair and Rodeo
K I C -K
FF
its the Music of
ominniDO
and his Orchestra
L - II II
V v u u
terror
Saturday,
JULY
21
i
County Fair Pavilion Heppner
Don't Miss this Great First Event of a
Thrilling Fair and Rodeo Program
I