Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, July 17, 1952
Page 3
dent Brings
unes
one Girl
By Echo Palmateer
jy Hubbard, daughter of
(id Mrs. Vaa Hubbard re
i scalp wound in a pick-up
tit Saturday evening on the
berry road near the Beckner
; south of lone. 30 stitches
taken. She reportedly lost
A of the pick-up which she
iriving and it overturned.
I McCoy and Darlene Mad
ifere with her and each re-
I slight bruises. The pick-up
I complete wreck. Peggy is
ent in the Pioneer Memor
jspita in Heppner for a few
jLhy Harris of Portland who
ten visiting her brother, Don
fe, at the L. L .Howton ranch,
&om a horse Sunday and cut
t ad on a rock. 15 stitches
Were taken to close the wound.
She spent the night in the hospi
tal in Heppner. Her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Harris of Portland took
her home Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Kumgamer
and. children of Spokane spent
the weekend at the home of her
brother, L. L. Howton
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Williams of
Portland spent Wednesnny at the
Franklin Ely home. They were
on their way home from a trip
in the East.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Campbell
and son of Connell, Wash., were
visitors at the L. L. Howton home
last week.
Miss Yvonne Keezc of Lind.
Wash., is working at the Roy
Lindstrom home. She is a niece
of L. L. Howton.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Linn and
children, David and Sharon, of
Vernonia visited relatives here
last week.
Jean Martin, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Frederick Martin is
visiting relatives in Ashwood.
Frank Engleman who has been
ill at his home for several weeks
Mr. and Mrs. Charles White of
Forest Grove are the parents of a
daughter, Donna Nathelle, born
July !l. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
White of lone and Mr. and Mrs.
H. B. Iligby of Forest Grove are
the grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Lundell
and son are spending the sum
mer at the home of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Algott Lundell.
Word was received of the death
of Ray Judy of the U. S. Army
who has been in Korea about a
month. He was the son of Mr
and Mrs. Ben Judy of The Dalles
and also a cousin of Ray Bamett
Henry CTark and granddaughter
Alecia Swales, spent the weekend
in Hermiston.
Gaylord Salter of the U. S. Army
stationed in Alaska is spending
his furlough with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Hugh Salter.
Clifford Aldrich left Monday of
last week to join the army.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon White at
tended the Friday Bridge Club in
Arlington Friday of last week.
Mrs. Ronald Tye met her hus
band the weekend of the Fourth
is able to be up a little each day. (at Weed, Calif. He is stationed
tt Camp Roberts, Cant.
I
. Y s I r ft-
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It Takes
24 Hours
For
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PHONE 152
Mr. and Mrs. James Bamett re
turned last week from San Fran
cisco where Mr. Barnett received
his honorable discharge from the
navy. They will make their home
in lone.
A bridal shower was given in
honor of Mrs. Fayne Ely by Mrs.
Arthur Warren and Mrs. Milton
Morgan at the Warren home in
the country. Mrs. Ely received
many lovely and useful gifts. .
1 he Maranatha Club met at the
home of Mrs. Echo Palmateer on
Wednesday afternoon of last
week. The club decided to have
new wiring put in the Co-opera
live church.
, The Garden Club met at the
' limnn i( Mr O T. T.nndpll with
Mrs. Omar Rietmann and Mrs.
Frederick as co-hostess. Mrs. Lun
dell and Mrs. Rietmann gave arti
cles on maintenance of gardens in
the summer. Mrs. Rietmann also
gae a very interesting report on
the Garden Club convention in
Portland this spring. The park
committee met and made tenta
tive plans for the park. Those on
this committee are: Mrs. Fred
rick Martin, Mrs. Ernest Ileliker,
Mrs. Fannie Griffith, Mrs. Dixon
Smith and Mrs. Lana Padberg.
Refreshments were served after
the meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Howton and
family attended the funeral ser
vices of Mrs. Howtons mother,
What it take
to find oil
for you
i
it tOO long agO, within the memory of living men,
doration for new petroleum deposits here in the West
iamatterof discovering oil seeps ordrilling on "hunch."
t even hunches had a reasonable chance of success,
hough methods were primitive, the early Western fields
tt brought into production at a cost which nowadays
uld seem extremely low.
-A
Mrs. Bertie Campbell, at Connell,
Wash., July 7. Interment was at
Olney cemetery in Pendleton.
Mrs. Campbell is survived by a
daughter, Mrs. Howton of lone,
and four sons, Glenn of Echo,
Clifford and John of Connell and
Claude of Warden, Wash.; a bro
ther, Lon E. Etter of Tilot Rock
and 14 grandchildren.
A stork shower was given in
honor of Mrs. Howard Adams
Monday July 7 in the basement
of the Co-operative Church. She
received many lovely gifts.
M. E. Cotter who was home
from the hospital in Heppner for
a few days returned there Thurs
day of last week.
H. 0. Ely, who is a patient In
the St. Anthony hospital in Pen
dleton, underwent another oper
ation on his hip last week and is
getting along satisfactorily.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Esteb are va
cationing at Ritter springs.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Burnap and
three children of Corvallis were
recent visitors at the home of her
uncle, Lewis Ball.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Bonin of
Ocean Lake were visitors at the
Donald Ball home last week. Mrs.
Bonin is a step mother of Mrs.
Ball. The Bonins and Mrs. Ball
spent Saturday in Baker.
ine iNoet Donyns new nouse on
Main street is making much pro
gress, lhe walls are now being
erected of concrete blocks and
will be painted white. The house
will have two bed rooms and a
den.
Contracts were given to the
following school bus drivers for
the coming school year: Goose
berry route, J. II. Bryson; Dry
Fork, Adon Hamlett; West lone.
John Eubanks; South lone, C. E.
Brenner; Rocky Bluff, Pete Can
non; North lone, Clifford McCabe;
North East lone, Edison Morgan;
Baker-Heimbigner route, Ernest
McCabe. Fred Buchanan was
electPd as janitor at the school
for the coming year. The 3rd -4th
and 7th-8th grade teachers have!
not been hired yet. j
Condon received the trophy as
champions of the Wheat-Timber:
baseball league when they defeat-1
ed lone here Sunday 12 to 10. j
Dates To Remember::
July 18 II. E ,C. of Willows
Grange at the hall in the after
noon. July 19 Grange meeting at 8
p. m.
July 25 Three Links Club at
the Ernest Heliker home.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Burton left
for their home in Portland Sun
day after visiting at the home of
her mother, Mrs. Lena Padberg.
Dorr Mason of Portland was a
visitor here Sunday.
School Principal
Moves To Lexington
By Delpha Jones
Mr. and Mrs. James Vanover
and family who will fill the po
sition of school principal for the
coming year, have moved into the
Congregational church parsonage.
Patty Steagall is spending some
time at the Alex Lindsey home
where she is assisting in harvest.
Dean n a Steagall is working at
the Alva Miller ranch at Morgan.
Mr. and Mrs. George Cast eel
and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Casteel of
Vancouver, Washington were
guests Sunday at the Bernard
Doherty home. .
The Three Links club met at
the home of Mrs. Robert David
son on Thursday with Mrs. C. C.
Jones in the chair. After the
business of the afternoon was
discussed the meeting adjourned.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess.
Joan Breeding is employed at
the Mark Weatherford home near
Olex. She spent the weekend at
the home of her parents Mr. and
Mrs. O. G. Breeding.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Taylor of
Portland were guests last week at
the A. M. Edwards home.
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Tucker
and family were guests at the
Bill Nickols home one day last
are
week.
ivir. aim ftirs. bill nickois
driving a new Ford car.
Mrs. Johnie Edwards and her
daughter, and Mrs, Hermann
Wallace and sons were Lexing
ton visitors over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kendall and
(laughters have recently moved
into the Barnett apartments.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Livingston
(Continued on page 6)
I
for all
occasions
MART VAN'S FLOWER SHOP
HERE ARE
TWO
SUPER
o
In KELVINATOR
SPECIALLY PRICED FOR JUST 30 DAYS
-ffmsf
s If ' ih-H I? v -
I'S not SO easy today. Most of the easily
Uacoverable deposits have been found. But
Handard geologists, using seismograph and the
test electronic methods, are combing every
ffomising part of America, from Louisiana swamps
0 the Arctic Circle ... and many foreign coun
ties as well. 9 As oil has become more difficult
Old expensive to produce, your demand has
wcome greater. More and more of the good
.: ,..r life Henend on TJetroleum for
iel, or lubrication, or their actual ingredients.
JTo do its share in the great new search for oil,
Standard alone has spent more than $230,000,000 in
the last 5 years. Result: U.S. companies altogether
have found enough untapped petroleum to give
this country its highest oil reserve in history
four times greater than that of 30 years ago.
J Geologists estimate that there are still 1500
billion barrels of undiscovered oil in the earth.
Standard Oil Company of California does every
thing possible in large scale exploration to increase
available reserves.
IANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA plans ahead to serve you better
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