Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1951)
Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, July 261951 Page 3 BOARDMAN ITEMS Mrs Jim Whitmire returned to her home in Grants Pass Friday after a few days here with her mother, Mrs. unve aiicucuj. Hallev Williams and Kenneth Healy had a collision at the Rogers corners last week. Wil liams was driving a Chevrolet pick-up which received little damage. Healy was driving a forty-one buick seaan ana was badly damaged. Both men were riding alone and neither one hurt. Judy Dickson, Portland was a weeks guest with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claud Worden. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Shattuck were called to Bickleton, Wash ington last week due to the ill ness of Mr. Shattuck's mother. She had suffered a severe heart attack and was taken to the hos pital in Sunnyside. " Mr. and Mrs. Seth Russell left Saturday for a weeks vacation spent on the coast. Vernon and Dale Russell will have charge of the service station. Mrs. Chas. Nickerson left Sat-1 urday for a months vacation with relatives in Boise Idaho, and San Bernardino, California. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Cole of Portland were week-end guests at the Frank Cole home. Chas. Is Mr. Cole's son. Keith Tannehill, Bob Sicard and Peter Cassidy were fishing South of Heppner Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cramer motored to Fossil Sunday where they attended the Pioneer picnic for Sherman and Gilliam Coun ties. Mr. and Mrs. Claud Coats motor, ed to Hardman Sunday after noon for a visit with Mrs. Coats brothers Jess and Henry Coats. Mr. and Mrs. Truman Messeng er Jr. Ordnance were at the Z. J. Gilliespie home Saturday after noon. Mrs. E. R. Forbes and daugh ter returned from Monmouth where Mrs. Forbes has been at tending summer school. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Agee who has resided near Goldendale the past WARNING! Home Owners! If you are considering insulating your home, don't let some high pressure salesman with a $3.00 sample kit insult your intelligence by telling you he knows more about insulating materials than engineers employed by the nation's leading manufacturers of aircraft ships, refrigerator trucks and all major home appliances. ..These engineers are equipped with million dollar labor atories, designed for testing efficiency and life of in sulating materials Wherever there is a need for per Immanent protection against heat or cold they select Owens-Corning FIBREGLAS INSULATION Check with your appliance and you will find Fibreglas the choice insulation ma terial No other material meets the permanent require ments set up by these million-dollar corporations. Who are going to believe? Insulation engineers with years of experience and proof of Fibreglas top quality or take some unknown man's word that be has something better. Fibreglas Blowing Wool Home Insulation Is Now Available In This Territory The Malone Insulation company of LaGrande has been selected by the Owens-Corning Co. as the exclusive distributor of Fibreglas Blowing Wool home insulation in all northeast Oregon. They are registered Insulation contractors and are recognized by the First National Bank of Portland and the United States National Bank. You are assured of a fair and square deal when Malone insulates your home with the one and only Owens Corning Fibreglas Blowing Wool Insulation. FHA terms available. Our representative will be in your territory for a free estimate on insulating your home. Fibreglas Blowing for the Life of the is installed. Lexington Family i Have Accident By Delpha Jones Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davidson and family had the misfortune to wreck their car on the way to Prineville, Sunday. Mrs. David son and children were on their way to California where she will spend some time visiting and to attend the wedding of a sister, Mr. Davidson returned home Sunday evening with 0. G. Breed ing who had motored to Prine' vllle taking his wife who will remain for a visit at the home of a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Don Grant and family. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bloodsworth are the proud parents of a son born in Pioneer Memorial hos pital. Mr. and Mrs. John Edwards have moved into the Barnett a partments. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Buchanan and small son, and Mr. and Mrs. George Irven and daughter of Ordnance were Lexington visit ors Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Pomeroy of Kelso, Washington were vi sitors at the home of her brother and family, W. E. McMillan. They were here to attend the funeral of the William George Helms, a nephew, that was killed In a car accident in lone. Mrs. C. C. Jones returned home Sunday after a week spent in Portland where she attended the Oregon Florist school of design, being a member of the gradu ating class on Saturday. Also go ing down was Mrs. LaVerne Van Marter of Heppner. Mrs. Jim Gray and small few years have returned to Boardman and are now residing in the old Murchie house. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Cooley, Fresno, California were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Tannehill. The two families motored to La Grande Sunday to visit the Don ald Tannehills. Mrs. Cooley and Mrs. Tannehill are sisters. 1 dealer, regardless of make. Wool is Guaranteed building in which it i h "issj XJeXPERMENTATION CAM LOSE ffflENDS. TAXe THE MATTER OF flYING COFFEE FOR TWENTY OR WORE PEOPLE. IT CAM BE A SCREAMING MEEMIES SESSION UJITfl THE KITCHEN SHAMBLES ... n i cce vl. Al IT- WATC v!p. J)t Wr CAN BE AN EAM, ') AUTHORITY AND TFW THIS RECIPE !)'', J FOR CAFFEIN-FREE COFFEE GUARAN PREFERENCE. , Opar ewe pound op caffein- FREE OR ORDINARY COFFEE (REGULAR GRIND IN A MUSLIN OR CHEESECLOTH BAG LARGE ENOUGH TO HOLD AT LEAST TWICE THAT AMOUNT. DROP BAG INTO A LARGE KETTLE CONTAINING 2 TO 2't GAL- LONS OF BOILING WATER . COVER TIGHTW, REDUCE HEAT TO PREVENT BOILING, AND LET STAND" IO To 12 MIN. PLUNGE BAG UP AND DOWN IN THE COFFEE SEVERAL TIMES; THEN REMOVE BA6 FROM KETTLE. daughter returned to their home in Cove, after a visit at the Ver non Goodell home. Pat Majeske has received off icial notification of her except ance into nurses training and will enter "Good Samaritan Hos pital" In Portland September 12. Mr. and Mrs. George Goodell of Minneapolis, Minn. Is visiting their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Goodell. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Greenwood of Spokane and Mr. and Mrs. Fred King of Spokane a daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Ed wards George Griffith of Oak- ridge, Oregon and Walter Grif fith and sister Frances of Port- lond were guests at the A. M. Edwards home called here by the death of Mrs. Edward's neice, Clara 'Griffith. Howard Cowl of lone, June Steagall, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Breshears and Pat Steagall were visitors at The Dalles on Satur day. Mr. Dopplemier of Portland, was a business visitor in Lexing ton this week He is at present at Camp Sherman, at their summer home. Lyle Allen of southern Cali fornia spn of Mr. and Mrs. George Allen Is spending some time in lone where he Is working in har vest. o V. A. Representative To Be in Pendleton Charles M. Cox, Contact Re presentative from the Veterans Administration Office in Baker, Oregon, will be in Pendleton Friday, July 27, 1951, to contact veterans and their dependents. He will be at the Oregon State Employment Service Office in the morning and at Eastern Ore gon State Hospital during the afternoon." Transferring & Heavy Hauling Padded Moving . Vans Storage Warehouse U.PandN.P. Pcnland Bros. Transfer Co. 39 SW Dorlon Arena Phone 338 Pendleton, Ore. by Frances Barton BREW A GOOD CUP OF COFFEE... ' FOR THE CROWD Qm urns of preparing corns (REGULAR OR CAFFEIN-f REE ) ARE U6I0N...AND AS INDIVIDUAL AS MOUR SIGNATURE. SOME WOMEN THROW ES6 SHELLS INTO THE POT BELIEVING IT IMPROVES THE FLAVOR.. PLEASANT CHORE MADE OBVIOUS TO HOUR CUESTS ONW EM THE MATCH' adIMA nc nei irirn ic f"OCCP TUAT IkinilJinilAI CI AID EflO HFFD TUP VOICE OF COFFEE TEED TO KEEP AO OR 50 PEOPLE HAPPU NO MATTER LUHAT THEIR AGE, HEALTH OR UOUID REFRESHMENT J8L Keep coeeee hot for service, BUT DO NOT ALLOW IT TO BOIL. MAKES 40 To 50 SERVINGS. - I T i 1 " 1 " CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our friends and neighbors for their kind words and acts of sympathy in the loss of our neice and sister Clara and for the many beauti ful floral offerings. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Edwards and family. George, Walter and Frances Griffith. i Mia, Housefly Getting Tough, New Ideas Needed to Kill Him Bzzz-z-zing. Swat. That's fly control reduced to its simplest deadly best. But there's too many flies' and not enough fly swatters so other con trol methods must be used. What? You've heard this: "Chemicals like DDT don't work on flies any more. The pesky things swallow it by the gallon. It doesn't faze 'em.". It's true, says Bob Every of Oregon State College, that the common housefly some of them, at least can be doused with DDT and they come back strong and sticky. The entomologist says ex periment station workers at the College, for example, have col lected more than 50 species of flies in the dairy barn. Although the housefly is the most common, it is the only one known to be resistant to DDT. Some of them are not. So, says Every, DDT is still re-1 commended for housefly control and in many cases is still giving satisfactory control. DDT is not recommended for use in dairy barns or on dairy cattle. Methoxy chlor is the chemical to use. Six teen pounds of 50 percent wet- table methoxychlor in 100 gallons of water is doing a job for many dairymen. Inside dairy barns where a re sidual flyspray is wanted, lin dane is recommended. It's more expensive than methoxychlor and at high concentrations can be dangerous to dairy stock. Don't spray them with it at re sidual spray concentrations. A two percent chlordane spray Is suggested for outside surfaces where other materials are not giving good control. Indoors, pyretrrum sprays give good, im mediate results, but they do not have a long-time lasting effect. Aerosol bombs are handy sup plementary fly control equipment in the home. The escaping cloud will kill only the flies and mos quitoes present at the time of ap prication, and it has no residual effect. As a final tip, Every says the best fly "control is still preven tion: eliminate breeding places. o NEED LETTERHEADS? Call The Gazette Times, 882 TbtiaM a. WW mm We're wanted to give you and everyono in town a chance to discover what it's like to drive a POWER GLIDE Chevrolet But demand for Chevrolet's great automatic transmission has been so huge ...we couldn't keep demonstrator! Now we refuse to wait any longer. In spite of growing demand, we've set a demon tiator aside for you to drive ... Come in expecting something wonderful-Chevrolet's Powerglide will exceed your expectations! Powerglide is not like any other automatic transmission in the low-price fieldl You just slip PoweroWde Is owner-proved over o billion miei. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank every one who helped during our fire and especially those that helped From where Just finished reading a magazine article that "proves" you and I don't know what's funny. A bunch of psychologists came to this sad conclusion after telling jokes to college students. Very' often they would give out with what the) considered a side-splitter and not get even a chuckle in response. Other times the stu dents would laugh their heads off t stories that weren't considered 'cally funny. Maybe I'm wrong, but what makes a psychologist such a better judge of humor than the rest of Copyright, "Lfff BUILD ORfOON TOGfTHEB' ay. 1 Of HEPPNER BRANCH f IRST NATIONAL BANK ? S OF PORTLAND the control lever into "DRIVE" position. Power glide does the rest But why just read about it when you can try it! Get your "Discovery Drive" this week for sure! telephone and brought their equipment, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Rice Mr. and Mrs. Roy Heimblgner I sit ... Joe Marsh What's So Funny? us? If a man gets a kick out of a joke that proves it was funny to him doesn't it? From where I sit, when psychol ogists try to set up a standard for a sense of humor they're getting too serious for me. Stands to rea son that different people laugh at different things, just as they have different tastes for most every thing. I'm partial to a glass of beer with meals myself but I promise not to make any "wise cracks" if you prefer tea. 1951, United States Brewers Foundation First National'i Easy-To-Pay Fiaanrfng Plan ...the low cost way to buy yoiir car. Arrange it through your dealer. Low interest rates.. .liberal monthly payments. Get details at any First National office or your dealer's. Mtmbw Ftdaral Dtpwlt ImeraiKt Corporation I ',1 CALL OR WRITE 7 Hodge Chevrolet Co. Phone 10273 LaGrande, Oregon HE I Will 0)